China has announced a slew of new measures to further open up its financial markets, according to the office of financial stability and development committee under the State Council, the cabinet.
File photo provided by the Shanghai Stock Exchange (SSE) shows an outside view of the SSE in Shanghai, east China. [Photo/Xinhua]
China will allow foreign-funded institutions to conduct credit rating business with all kinds of bonds in China's inter-bank and exchange bond market, according to a statement of the office posted on the website of the central bank on Saturday.
Overseas financial institutions will be encouraged to participate in setting up and investing in the asset management subsidiaries of commercial banks.
Meanwhile, overseas asset management agencies will be permitted to co-establish foreign-controlled asset management companies together with subsidiaries of Chinese banks or insurers, the statement said.
The new rule allows overseas financial institutions to invest in setting up or holding stakes in old-age pension management companies. It also supports foreign capital to establish or hold stakes in currency brokerages.
At the same time, the upper shareholding limits for foreign investors in domestic insurers will be allowed to exceed 25 percent.
China will facilitate foreign institutional investors in investing in the inter-bank bond market by greenlighting them in obtaining type-A underwriting licenses in the market, said the statement.