BEIJING, Aug. 21 -- Mainland residents will, for the
first time, be allowed to directly invest in overseas securities under a pilot
program to be launched in the northern port city of Tianjin.
Investors can use their foreign exchange or purchase
foreign currency to open an account with Bank of China's Tianjin branch or Bank
of China International Securities in Hong Kong, according to a statement on the
State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) website yesterday.
The investment amount will not be subject to the
annual limit of 50,000 U.S. dollars for an individual to purchase foreign
exchange, as per earlier rules.
"This is part of the process of China's capital
account reform," Chen Jijun, analyst with Beijing-based CITIC Securities, told
China Daily.
"It will help ease liquidity pressure in the country
as foreign exchange reserves pile up rapidly," Chen said.
Stephen Green,
senior economist with Standard Chartered Bank (China), described it as "a
historic move in China's capital account opening."
SAFE said in the statement: "This is an important
measure to widen the channels for foreign exchange outflows and promote basic
balance in international payments."
Individuals were earlier allowed to invest overseas
indirectly through banks, brokerages, insurers and fund managers through the
qualified domestic institutional investors (QDII) scheme.
"Now, the new program will provide an alternative for
domestic individuals eyeing overseas markets," Chen said.
Analysts said the Hong Kong market will be the first
to benefit as many mainlanders are likely to buy stocks of mainland companies
listed there.
"It is absolutely good news for the Hong Kong stock
market," said Paul Lee, banking and insurance analyst at Hong Kong-based Taifook
Securities.
"The policy will surely be welcomed by Hong Kong
investors, because mainland investors' participation will help boost confidence
as well as market sentiment," he told China Daily.
"After last week's market turmoil, this policy is
timely support for Hong Kong."
The Hang Seng Index jumped 1208 points to close at
21,595 yesterday, up 5.9 percent - the highest intraday rise in recent years.
Lee said the mainland will benefit too, as capital
diverted from the A-share market will help "prevent overheating" and "relieve
pressure for the yuan to rise."
It is yet to be seen, however, whether the new policy
will be well received by mainland investors, Chen said.
"The domestic market has remained strong despite the
recent fluctuations and I'm not sure whether many investors would choose to
invest abroad, at least for now."
Tianjin's Binhai New Area, chosen for the pilot
program, is widely considered the country's third economic engine after Pudong
in the Yangtze River Delta and Shenzhen in the Pearl River Delta.
(Source: China Daily)