HOME    NEWS    SPECIAL REPORT    PHOTO    COMMENTARY    VOICE
NEWS > Business
QFII investment quota breaks 8 bln U.S.dollar mark
2006-10-10 01:58:31 Xinhua English

BEIJING, Oct. 10 (Xinhua) -- The combined investment quotas of qualified foreign institutional investors (QFII) broke the 8 billion U.S. dollar mark after the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) said Monday it had granted Credit Suisse a 200 million U.S. dollar quota.

"With more and more state-owned banks and enterprises embracing the stock market and the recovery of Chinese capital markets, foreign investment will continue to flow into China," said a SAFE official.

According to the latest SAFE statistics, QFIIs invested a total of 2.1 billion dollars in China's stock market in the first half of the year.

In the same period, the market saw an inflow of 15.6 billion dollars in overseas investment, up 108 percent year on year.

Sixteen overseas investors obtained QFII status between January and September, seven more than for the same period last year.

Forty of the 50 foreign institutions that have QFII status have been awarded a combined investment quota of 8.05 billion dollars. The 10 billion U.S. dollar mark will no doubt be reached in the near future.

To facilitate the entry of more QFIIs, the authorities issued new rules in August, lowering the QFII qualification threshold.

For example, the securities assets requirement for potential QFIIs was reduced from 10 billion dollars to five billion dollars.

China launched the QFII program in 2003, allowing foreign institutional investors such as UBS, Deutsche Bank and Citigroup Global Markets Limited to engage in the securities business on the Chinese mainland.

Statistics show that QFIIs earned more than 2.5 billion dollars in China over the past three years.

QDIIs, or qualified domestic institutional investors, were launched in 2006 as a counterpart to QFIIs. Enditem

MORE NEWS
Real name system for mobile users to launch  
Shanghai to improve housing market transparency  
CBRC offers loan plan for small firms  
Guangzhou Honda to recall faulty vehicles in China  
State pension fund signs deals with foreign trustees  
Bilateral trade volume between China and Japan to top 200b USD  
China's technology imports up 45.2%  
Regulators back co-op between banks, insurers  

SINA English is the English-language destination for news and information about China. Find general information on life, culture and travel in China through our news and special reports£¬or find business partners through our online Business Directory. For investment opportunities with SINA, please click the link "Investor" below.
| About SINA | Investor | Media Kit | Comments or Question? |
Copyright © 1996-2006 SINA Corporation, All Rights Reserved