Buy Sell Resources My Office Chinese Manufacturer
Sell Buy Corporation Information
Home > Resources
Manage
Railway helps Tibet save $23 mln of transportation costs
McDonald's eyes growth of 24-hour restaurants
Railway lifts Tibet's foreign trade by 75% in 10 months
Mainland shares gain; Shanghai Automotive rises
Wahaha steps up legal threat in Danone battle
Draft on foreign M&As gets 2nd reading
Resources
China'China's June manufacturing pace in 4-month lows June manufacturing pace in 4-month low
BoCom to create rating system to assess credit worthiness
China moves toward cutting bank savings tax
Auditor finds misconduct affecting US$2b at three major banks
China mulls issue of 1.55 trillion yuan of treasury bonds to buy forex
Exchange starts gold trading via local banks
Industry
Stocks slide amid cooling demand for equities
Corporate bonds set to take off in China
Domestic shares fall amid measures to cool markets
Chinese shares tumble again as gov't works to rein in liquidity
China industrial-company profits climb 42%
Stocks fall for 3rd day as demand for shares slows
State investment arm will merge into new company
SHANGHAI, July 2 -- CHINA will merge Central Huijin Investment Co, the government's investment arm, into a new agency to better manage mounting foreign reserves, deputy governor of the central bank said over the weekend.


The new State Investment Co will assume the responsibilities of Central Huijin, Wu Xiaoling, deputy governor of the People's Bank of China, said at a forum in Shanghai on Saturday.


Central Huijin has controlling stakes on behalf of the government in the nation's three-biggest state-owned banks.


"The government will enhance Central Huijin's decision-making power and let it have more say in the stakes it holds based on a market-oriented mechanism," Wu said.


Central Huijin played a key role in the restructuring of state-owned banks.


Central Huijin completed bailouts to lenders such as Bank of China, China Construction Bank and Industrial and Commercial Bank of China. The three received a combined US$60 billion through Huijin from the central bank.


The three banks reported an average profit growth of 26 percent last year.


Central Huijin was set up in December 2003 in Beijing with registered capital of 372.5 billion yuan (US$47.2 billion).


Wu declined to release further details on the merger of Central Huijin and State Investment.


Minister of Finance Jin Renqing said in March that the country would set up a new state investment arm to better manage foreign exchange reserves. Forex reserves topped US$1.2 trillion, the world's biggest, as exports boomed.


The Ministry of Finance on Friday won approval from law makers to issue 1.55 trillion yuan of special treasury bonds to buy up a portion of China's foreign-exchange reserves and inject those funds into the planned State Investment Co.


The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index dropped 2.39 percent to 3,820.70 on Friday after tumbling 4.03 percent on Thursday.


The issuance of the T-bonds will not change the liquidity situation, but the stock market may drop due to the bond news, said Fred Hu, managing director of Goldman Sachs (Asia) LLC on Saturday.


His view was echoed by Stephen Roach, Asia chairman of Morgan Stanley. He said the move was an accounting operation as reserves would be transferred from the State Administration of Foreign Exchange to the new investment arm.

About us | Link
Copyright Notice © 2005-2010,www.863171.net Corporation and its licensors. All rights reserved.