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China, India Compete for Bourses as Regional Rivalry Expands

A Chinese bourse is outbidding the NSE for Bangladesh’s main stock exchange.

China, India Compete for Bourses as Regional Rivalry Expands
Pedestrians walk in front of the Dhaka Stock Exchange in the financial center of Dhaka, Bangladesh. (Photographer: David Greedy/Bloomberg News)

(Bloomberg) -- The push for geopolitical influence in Asia is expanding from hard infrastructure to financial assets, with a Chinese bourse outbidding an India rival for Bangladesh’s main stock exchange.

The Shenzhen Stock Exchange offered more money for a 25 percent stake in the Dhaka Stock Exchange, but also sweetened its bid with nearly $40 million worth of technical assistance, according to documents seen by Bloomberg News. It follows a successful 2016 bid from a Chinese consortium that included the Shenzhen and Shanghai stock exchanges that purchased 40 percent of the Pakistan Stock Exchange.

India’s main bourse, the National Stock Exchange, bid a lower amount for the Dhaka bourse and also wanted to negotiate additional services in separate agreements, according to the documents.

The Chinese offer, currently awaiting final approval from the Bangladesh regulator, is part of the broader contest between Beijing and New Delhi in the region’s smaller countries, from Nepal to Myanmar. Beijing had already invested heavily in the region’s hard infrastructure. But as China seeks closer economic ties as part of its Belt and Road Initiative -- a vast network of ports, railways, roads and infrastructure -- its state-owned bourses have also been investing in foreign exchanges.

China, India Compete for Bourses as Regional Rivalry Expands

“China is implementing a long-term strategy of quiet encirclement of all potential rivals in Asia," said Husain Haqqani, South and Central Asia director at the Hudson Institute in Washington, and Pakistan’s former ambassador to the U.S. "That strategy includes seeking economic pre-eminence in South Asian countries and the bids for bourses is part of that plan," he added.

Winning Bid

The Shenzhen bid was roughly $120 million, compared to NSE’s $82 million. But the Chinese deal also offered to help Dhaka with training, technical assistance, technological upgrades and secondments. The Chinese would also help the exchange diversify into bonds, asset-backed securities and derivatives, while offering seminars on regulatory issues.

Separately, Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina told Indian journalists Feb. 20 that their nation shouldn’t worry about Chinese investment in her country. “We want investment and cooperation from whoever offers it,” she said according to the Press Trust of India.

The Dhaka bourse bid was not China’s first. Along with its 40 percent stake in the Pakistan Stock Exchange, the Shenzhen Stock Exchange has also held talks about investing in the Philippine Stock Exchange Inc., Ramon Monzon, the latter’s chief executive officer, said in October.

"The stock exchanges in China are all state-owned," said Hu Xingdou, an economics professor at the Beijing Institute of Technology. "They represent the growing financial power of China, and this potential acquisition shows the mounting financial influence of China on Belt and Road countries."

China’s foreign ministry didn’t respond to an emailed request for comment. Shenzhen Stock Exchange did not return phone calls seeking comment. 

‘Chinese Influence’

Beijing has already planned investments worth more than $50 billion in the China Pakistan Economic Corridor projects and built a port at Sri Lanka’s Hambantota

President Xi Jinping visited Bangladesh in 2016 and announced $20 billion in low-cost loans, mostly for infrastructure. India has tried to push back, offering billions in lines of credit and infrastructure assistance to Bangladesh, while funding projects in Myanmar.

“Bangladesh is walking through a geopolitical minefield," said Ahsan Mansur, executive director of the Dhaka-based Policy Research Institute. "It’s always a balancing act while dealing with China and India."

Buying up bourses extends China’s influence from physical to financial infrastructure and could eventually lead to China impacting global norms, said Shailesh Kumar, Asia director at Eurasia Group, a political risk consultancy. Over time, "transparency could be affected" on these exchanges, particularly if "standards for listing are diluted," he said.

"While till now many expected both to seek influence to own hard assets, the Dhaka Stock Exchange situation showcases that China really is interested in broad-based influence and access," Kumar said. "Beyond roads and ports, China shows it’s interested in dominating all aspects of South Asia by exporting its philosophy and means of doing business."

To contact the reporters on this story: Arun Devnath in Dhaka at adevnath@bloomberg.net, Iain Marlow in New Delhi at imarlow1@bloomberg.net, Keith Zhai in Singapore at qzhai4@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Ruth Pollard at rpollard2@bloomberg.net, Unni Krishnan

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.