KKR, BlackRock get approval to invest Chinese funds overseas

Reuters

Published May 10, 2022 05:54AM ET

By Selena Li

HONG KONG (Reuters) - KKR and BlackRock (NYSE:BLK) have received Chinese regulatory approvals allowing their newly formed local units to raise funds for investing overseas, official filings showed.

The approvals are the biggest of their kind so far this year and signal that Beijing is forging ahead with opening its financial markets to foreigners despite worries over currency depreciation and prolonged COVID-related lockdowns in its financial centre, Shanghai.

The two firms' fund units cleared their final hurdles to secure quotas from China's nine-year-old qualified domestic limited partnership (QDLP) programme, according to filings, allowing them to invest funds raised onshore, from high net-worth and institutional investors, in offshore funds.

The yuan has fallen about 5% in little more than three weeks, and sharp yuan depreciation in the past has prompted Chinese authorities to suspend outbound investment schemes such as QDLP, halting licence and quota issuance out of fear that capital outflows would amplify unwanted currency volatility.

But the latest regulatory action mostly "falls in the policy continuum", Nicholas Omondfi, Shanghai-based director at consultancy Z-Ben Advisors, told Reuters.

There is an acknowledgement over the years among multiple financial authorities, he said, that the domestic market is internationalising and bringing in global expertise will be beneficial in some ways.

"QDLP is very much part of this path forward so I wouldn't expect reversal on the quota pledges regulators have made."

KKR registered its wholly-owned fund management unit with Asset Management Association of China (AMAC) under the QDLP programme on April 21, an official record from the sector regulator showed.

The registration, as per local rules, means the U.S. private equity firm can now start fundraising for overseas investments. It took KKR about nine months to complete the registration process, which is a de-facto approval system.

It is one of 24 asset managers, both Chinese and foreign, that will share $5 billion worth of QDLP quotas. The programme has allotted more than $50 billion in quotas via local governments since it was launched in 2013.

Separately, BlackRock's fund management unit has become the first wholly foreign-owned retail fund manager to get a QDLP licence, according to an official statement posted last week by the Shanghai Municipal Office of Finance Service.