Buy Sell Resources My Office Chinese Manufacturer
    Sell Buy Corporation Information      
Home > Resources
Resources  
Chinese shoemakers to file suit against EU
China's per capita GDP to reach 2,400 USD in 2010
Tourists each spend 54 USD in "golden week"
Turnover of China's Logistics industry grows 15.3 pct in 1st halfyear
China's airlines expand seating to provide for overweight passengers
Nation steps up anti-piracy campaign
carve out  
Housing price grows sharply in downtown Shanghai
China sets sugar import quota for 2007
China maintains surplus under current, capital accounts
Official: China starts filling strategic oil reserve
China bans imports of GE generator, citing defects
Logistics, purchasing volume up 15 pct Jan-June
Industry  
China earns 7 bln USD from tourism during National Day
China's No. 1 bank sets Shanghai IPO price range
China's stock market enters new stage as shareholding reform draws to close
Pawnshops see booming business around National Day holidays
China criticizes European shoe tariffs, threatens possible retaliation
China mulls transfer of state-owned shares to national pension fund
 
China's pension fund to invest US$1 billion abroad
BEIJIGN, Oct. 10 (AP) -- China's state pension fund is preparing to make its first investments abroad, putting up to US$1 billion (€700 million) into foreign financial markets in an effort to improve returns on its reserves, the fund's chief said Tuesday.


The step comes as the 230 billion yuan (US$29 billion; €23 billion) National Social Security Fund tries to expand its resources to cope with the growing demands of China's aging population.


The fund's guidelines allow it to invest up to 20 percent of its assets abroad, or 46 billion yuan (US$5.8 billion; €4.5 billion), said fund chairman Xiang Huaicheng in comments on state television.


The first stage of foreign investments will involve US$800 million-US$1 billion (€550-700 million), but the timing and other details haven't been decided, Xiang said.


Beijing has begun allowing Chinese banks, insurance and other financial companies to invest in foreign financial markets in an effort to improve the return on their assets.


Until recently, they were limited to investing in Chinese stock markets, which are small and subject to wild price swings, or government bonds, which pay low interest.


The pension fund was created in 2000 to finance pensions paid by China's central government, and faces soaring demands in coming years as the number of retirees rises.


China's demographic problem is especially acute because birth-control rules limit most urban families to one child mean. That means that the average age of the population is rising rapidly, and the ratio of working people to retirees will drop sharply in coming years.


On Monday, the pension signed agreements with U.S.-based Northern Trust Corp. and Citigroup Inc. to act as trustees for its foreign investments.


The foreign investment strategies of other national pension systems vary widely. In the United States, the Social Security fund keeps its reserves in government bonds, while other countries such as Singapore have tens of billions of dollars invested abroad.

Contact us | About us | Link
Copyright Notice © 2004-2006,eng.863171.com Corporation and its licensors. All rights reserved.