China eases rules for insurers in bid to boost flows into stocks
CHINA has taken a move that effectively allows insurance firms to make longer-term investment in shares, adding to a drumbeat of support measures to revitalise the country’s stock market.
The Ministry of Finance will, from now on, evaluate insurers’ return on net assets based on a combination of a three-year cycle and a one-year time frame, instead of just the latter previously, it said in a notice released on Monday (Oct 30). The ministry said that the change, effective immediately, is aimed at guiding long-term capital to play a stronger role of market “stabiliser”.
The move is the latest in a series of steps taken by policymakers to prop up a stock market that has become one of the world’s worst performers this year. The onshore CSI 300 index fell again on Tuesday morning, ending a five-day winning streak after fresh weakness in manufacturing and services activity revived concerns about China’s economy.
“This is an opportune time for insurance funds to add positions in stocks, especially following buying by Central Huijin and the special approval of issuances of sovereign bonds, just as fundamentals are starting to improve,” said Li Zhan, chief economist at China Merchants Fund Management’s research department. The ministry’s announcement could drive about 2.6 trillion yuan (S$486 billion) into stocks and equity mutual funds, if insurers raise their equity investment by three percentage points and deploy 16 per cent for such investment, Li estimates.
China has intensified efforts to restore investor confidence in a languishing stock market in recent months. They included buying of exchange-traded funds by Central Huijin Investment, a unit of the country’s sovereign wealth fund, as well as purchases by major mutual funds of their own equity-focused products, lower transaction costs, and tighter oversight of short selling.
The finance ministry said in the same notice that insurance firms should set reasonable investment targets and properly balance risk and return, as well as refrain from making high-risk investments. Those that do not meet certain criteria in areas including solvency are prohibited from making new investment.
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Under current regulations, China’s insurance firms are permitted to invest between 10 per cent and 45 per cent of their total assets in equities based on their solvency ratios. BLOOMBERG
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