Chinese regulator gives green light to fund targeting Korean chipmakers

    • The China Securities Regulatory Commission has given the greenlight to the country’s first mutual fund targeting top Chinese and South Korean chipmakers.
    • The China Securities Regulatory Commission has given the greenlight to the country’s first mutual fund targeting top Chinese and South Korean chipmakers. PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Mon, Oct 10, 2022 · 06:42 PM

    CHINA’S securities regulator has given the green light to the country’s first mutual fund targeting top Chinese and South Korean chipmakers, an official at Huatai-PineBridge Fund Management Co said, amid an escalating Sino-US tech war.

    The China Securities Regulatory Commission’s approval comes amid heightened geopolitical tensions between the world’s two largest economies.

    The Biden administration published a sweeping set of export controls on Friday (Oct 7), seeking to hobble China’s chip industry.

    Huatai-PineBridge made the application for regulatory approval on Aug 9.

    The exchange-traded fund (ETF) will invest in top Korean semiconductor firms including Samsung Electronics Co and SK Hynix, as well as Chinese chipmaking giants such as Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp and Montage Technology Co.

    “The Chinese and Korean semiconductor industries are expected to be closely integrated,” creating synergies, Huatai-PineBridge said in prepared marketing material for the ETF, whose launch date has not yet been determined.

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    The mutual fund will also benefit from China’s accelerated pace towards achieving tech self-sufficiency amid US sanctions, according to the marketing material, which mentioned the US blacklisting of China’s Huawei Technologies, and the recently enacted CHIPS and Science Act.

    In 2021, South Korea was China’s second-biggest exporting country in various types of equipment, including chipmaking tools, and Chinese exports to South Korea have also been rising, the fund manager said.

    South Korea said on Saturday that there would be no significant disruption to equipment supply for Samsung and SK Hynix’s existing chip production in China from the US move.

    The new US export controls are an abuse of trade measures, China’s foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said on Saturday.

    The newly approved ETF will track the CSI KRX China-Korea Semiconductor Index.

    The index was launched as part of a broader cooperation agreement which was signed last year between the Shanghai Stock Exchange and the Korean Exchange (KRX) to promote cross-border investment between the two markets. REUTERS

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