Home / China extends securities lending program

China extends securities lending program

China has extended its pilot securities lending program, for short sellers and other managers, which was launched last August.

A group of 11 brokerages will be able to borrow shares in a pre-qualified pool of 90 listed “blue-chip” companies, the China Securities Journal said last week, citing information received from the state-owned China Securities Finance Corporation that services the pilot program.

The 90 stocks available for borrowing represent RMB 9.3 trillion in tradable capitalization, nearly 50 per cent of China’s A-share market.

  • The first phase of the pilot project was limited to allowing brokerages to borrow money, not shares, from institutional investors.Allowing brokerages to borrow shares directly will let them, in theory, tap into the massive pool of shares held passively by mainland state-owned enterprises.

    Regulators will closely manage the program, the report says, quoting unnamed experts who predicted the impact of the initiative will be market neutral.

    The report says the initial amount of stocks to be borrowed is likely to total around RMB 510 million.

    One of the issues facing China’s nascent securities market is that the cost of borrowing is three-four times as high as it is in developed markets.

    Investor Strategy News


    Related
    Japan’s equity market is surging. But is it sustainable?

    The Land of the Rising Sun has had more than its fair share of false dawns since its economic bubble burst in 1989, but now there is a growing expectation among some analysts that the current share market rally is sustainable in the long term.

    Nicholas Way | 17th May 2024 | More
    What big super can learn from small funds

    Bigger isn’t always better when it comes to member services. Megafunds might be able to mass customise, but when you’ve got two million members it’s tough to bring the personal touch.

    Lachlan Maddock | 15th May 2024 | More
    Endowments’ long game suffers short-term setback

    The famous and closely watched US endowment model took a hit in FY23, with smaller, equity-heavy investors taking the lead. But the longer-term superiority of a chunkier exposure to alternatives remains unchallenged.

    James Dunn | 15th May 2024 | More
    Popular