ADVERTISEMENT

China to Grant More Licenses to Wall Street in Six Months

China to Grant More Licenses to Wall Street Banks in Six Months

(Bloomberg) -- Sign up for our new China newsletter, a weekly dispatch coming soon on where China stands now and where it's going next.

Full coverage at bloomberg.com/davos, on Twitter @business and via our special WhatsApp alerts.

A top Chinese regulator said more approvals will be given in the next six months to global banks seeking majority ownership in their local securities ventures, as authorities vowed to allow foreign firms greater access to its $40 trillion financial sector.

China to Grant More Licenses to Wall Street in Six Months

“We do have a few companies in the process of applying for 51 percent,” Fang Xinghai, vice chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission, said Thursday in a Bloomberg Television interview with Haslinda Amin on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. “In the next six months you will see more licenses being granted.”

Chinese officials have repeatedly stressed their determination to press ahead with opening up the country’s financial sector to international companies. Greater foreign involvement will provide a timely boost for the domestic industry amid an economic slowdown, while Wall Street firms stand to reap billions of dollars in profit from a new market.

UBS Group AG in December became the first foreign company to win approval for a majority stake in a local securities venture under new rules as President Xi Jinping said the country was “steadily widening the opening-up” of its financial industry. Nomura Holdings Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. have also filed applications.

Fang said that, while the regulator can grant “very swift” approval, the application process tends to take longer as the foreign shareholder must buy the stake from a local partner. “It’s these kind of procedures that have occupied the time,” he said.

China’s representatives at Davos this year have echoed Xi’s defense of globalization amid a trade war with the U.S. Leaders have said that more foreign participation in the financial sector can improve the quality and sophistication of domestic industry and make capital more efficient.

The CSRC handles applications for overseas majority stakes in securities and asset management. It’s also responsible for the country’s capital markets, another area where authorities are keen to see increased offshore participation.

Meanwhile, Fang blamed the U.K.’s Brexit distraction for the delay of the Shanghai-London connect program that will allow cross-border stock listings. The system, scheduled to start on Dec. 14, has failed to launch and no official comment has been made on its status.

“You have to ask the British government,” said Fang, adding that China remained committed to moving ahead with the connect and forging a stronger link between London and Shanghai. “They have to get their vision right.”

For Chinese traders and fund managers, the connect will offer a chance to buy into some globally renowned companies and broaden their investment universe, while investors in London will get local access to Chinese stocks.

--With assistance from Haslinda Amin.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Jun Luo in Shanghai at jluo6@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Sam Mamudi at smamudi@bloomberg.net, Dan Reichl, Josh Friedman

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

With assistance from Bloomberg