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China deepens integration into global financial markets with inclusion of indexes: IMF

Xinhua | Updated: 2019-06-20 10:38

A night view of the Beijing CBD on Sept 9, 2018. [Photo/IC]

WASHINGTON - China is embarking on the next stage of its integration into global financial markets with the inclusion of Chinese stocks and bonds in a large number of global indexes, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said in a blog Wednesday.

"It is a stage that is likely to see a fresh flood of overseas investment, improved liquidity, better governance, and a broader range of instruments," said the blog, co-authored by three IMF researchers.

The Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Index started including China's yuan-demoninated government and policy bank bonds in April, with a 20-month phase-in period, marking the latest step in opening China's financial market to global investors. Last year, the country's yuan-denominated A-shares were included in the MSCI Emerging Markets Index, giving overseas investors greater access to its equity market.

As Chinese securities are added, investment managers who seek to match or surpass the returns of the indexes will adjust their portfolios to include Chinese stocks and bonds, the IMF blog said, adding that increasingly it is these benchmark-driven asset managers who are propelling portfolio flows.

Portfolio flows to China increased sharply following the country's inclusion in the MSCI equity indexes in 2018, the blog said, adding that aggregate portfolio inflows rose to $159 billion in 2018 from $50 billion in 2016.

Assets tracking the Bloomberg Barclays index could total $2 trillion to $2.5 trillion, according to analysts, the blog noted. Assuming an expected weighting of 6 percent, China can expect to see an additional $150 billion of inflows by 2020.

Moreover, the blog said that plus the widely expected inclusion of Chinese bonds and equities into FTSE and JP Morgan indexes, China can expect to see benchmark-driven portfolio inflows of as much as $450 billion, or 3 percent to 4 percent of GDP, in the next two to three years.

Greater foreign investor participation may subject Chinese markets to "greater scrutiny" and "stricter governance standards," and it should also lead to improved market liquidity and a potentially broader range of instruments, including those for hedging foreign exchange risks, "which would benefit both local and foreign investors," the blog said.

Meanwhile, the blog noted that investors may reduce purchases of other emerging-market assets as they "re-balance" their portfolios to reflect China's inclusion. As a result, emerging market government issuers could see an average reduction of allocations by $1 billion to $3 billion each.

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