A New Route For China’s Investors To The Rest Of World

 | Oct 07, 2015 12:37AM ET

Kenny Lam explains the Qingdao Pilot Operation in the latest (Q3 2015) issue of the AIMA Journal. All the direct quotations in what follows will be to Lam’s article.

Lam, a tax partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers, begins at the beginning: given existing restrictions, Chinese investors with capital they want to put to work outside of China have limited choices. For a long time the choices were two: they could work through the QDII program, or the Shanghai-Hong Kong Stock Connect.

Just two years ago the government pioneered another approach, the Qualified Domestic Limited Partner program. This was at first just Shanghai based. Local firms there were allowed to raise yuan to invest in alternative assets overseas, with the involvement of certain foreign fund and PE managers.

h3 Creating A New Center/h3

Fortunately (for such investors) the government also wants to turn the coastal city of Qingdao into a wealth management center. In the service of that goal, in February 2015 it created Pilot Measures for Qualified Domestic Limited Partnerships, measures designed to build up this city. The pilot lets foreign investors establish an entity in Qingdao; and, using this established investment entity as a general partner, they can then take on qualified domestic limited partners within an RMB Fund Enterprise.

The main business of this limited partnership, that is, this RMB enterprise, shall be to invest capital in overseas markets, specifically as Lam explains “on overseas listed securities as well as in M&A businesses in overseas unlisted entities and regulated commodities markets.” It must appoint a “qualified commercial bank in Qingdao as custodian bank.” That custodian will be in charge of the forex settlement issues. It will either use RMB or deal with foreign currencies within a quota approved by the Working Group.

An RMB entity cannot invest through a QFII or a QFLP.