Make home page | Add to Favorites
  Home | Login | Join |  China site  
 
 
 
Sell
 
 
 
 
       
Home > Resources
Manage
Former liquor firm bosses face prosecution
China Eastern seals a deal with Singaporean airliner
WTO to rule on U.S., Mexcican allegations of Chinese subsidies
Chinese court awards US$25,500 in video piracy case
Ikea mainland sales soar 38 percent in 2007
Central Bank: Annual inflation likely to exceed govt's 3% target
Resources
Forbes: Asia's Fab 50 Companies 2007
China aims high in renewable energy usage to pursue sustained growth
China reconsiders anti-dumping duty on Russian chemical supplier
China to issue 20 bln yuan of certificate T-bonds
China replaces Japan as Australia's top trade partner
China adopts anti-monopoly law
Industry
Shanghai stocks approach 5,400 marks
Stocks drop as lenders, steel makers decline
Coal sector drives indices up to new high
Civil aviation industry 'developing too fast'
Blue-chips send market to new high
Banks, steel push stocks higher
China considers lowering threshold for investment in QDII products
BEIJING, Sept. 6 (Xinhua) -- China's securities watchdog is considering lowering the threshold for individuals allowed to invest in banks' QDII (qualified domestic institutional investor) products to 100,000 yuan (13,158 U.S. dollars), according to Thursday's China Securities Journal.


Individuals are currently required to have a minimum of 300,000yuan (39,500 dollars) to invest.


"The current level, still too high for many domestic investors, will hinder them from enjoying the benefits of investing in overseas stock markets," the newspaper quoted an unidentified source as saying.


Lowering the threshold to 100,000 yuan will help make QDII products more accessible to domestic investors and channel more capital into overseas markets, the source said.


In an effort to curb excessive liquidity, the Chinese government has tried to encourage investment in overseas markets since 1996.


The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) allows fund management firms with net assets of more than 200 million yuan (26million U.S. dollars) and more than two years of operational experience, and securities dealers with net assets of more than 800 million yuan and more than one year of investment management operations experience to apply for QDII status.


Last year, the Shanghai-based Hua An Fund Management Co., Ltd. became China's first fund management firm to be allowed to invest overseas as a pilot QDII, with a quota of 500 million U.S. dollars.


Its first QDII product, launched in November last year, raised 197 million U.S. dollars and yielded five percent over the subsequent six months.


So far, a total of seven funds have gained government approval to conduct QDII business.

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