Category Archives: Indepth

China Focus: Chinese firms sail on int’l capacity cooperation boat

China Focus: Chinese firms sail on int’l capacity cooperation boat

BEIJING, May 25 (Greenpost) — Chinese enterprises are gaining a stronger presence abroad off the back of motions to deepen international industrial capacity cooperation, while this effort is creating a new domestic economic growth engine.

State Grid Corp. of China (SGCC), the world’s largest utility company, last week in Brazil witnessed a groundbreaking ceremony of an ultra-high voltage electricity transmission project at the Belo Monte Hydroelectric Dam, which was attended by visiting Chinese Premier Li Keqiang and Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff.

This was SGCC’s first overseas transmission project. It will help provide safe and reliable energy and support social development in Brazil.

Global industrial cooperation is a priority for China against the backdrop of a slower domestic growth pace and unsteady global economic recovery. The creation of jobs and the identification of new growth engines are on top of many governments’ agendas, experts said.

Li, a proponent of industrial capacity cooperation, signed trade agreements worth 27 billion U.S. dollars during his visit to Brazil.

The Belo Monte project is testimony of the nation’s “going global” drive. Advanced equipment produced by SGCC subsidiaries have found their way to more than 80 countries including the United States and Germany, with total export volume surging to 3 billion yuan (490 million U.S. dollars) last year, up 29 percent from 2013.

China is now the world’s largest manufacturing exporter, with total goods export volume reaching 14.4 trillion yuan last year. Mechanical and electrical equipment and high-tech products amount for 56 percent and 29 percent respectively.

There is also a pressing need for the going global of high-end industrial capacity to support growth, as the competitiveness of certain traditional industries is waning due to rising operational costs for exporters, said Zheng Yuesheng, spokesperson for the General Administration of Customs.

China is strengthening industrial capacity cooperation worldwide, moving production lines abroad, which creates jobs in other countries while boosting China’s exports, analysts said.

The government has issued a list of prioritized sectors in which it wishes to enhance such cooperation, including steel, non-ferrous metals, construction materials, railways, electric power, chemicals, textiles, automobiles, telecommunications and machinery.

“Proactive efforts to further open up have paved the way for manufacturers to go global,” Vice Minister of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology Liu Lihua wrote in a recent article.

Against the background of industrial upgrades, companies should aim to increase exports of products with high added-value, relabeling themselves as service exporters rather than just goods exporters and creating globally renowned brands, Liu said.

China should get used to its shifting role to capital exporter from capital importer, while Chinese firms should tap into foreign markets and hone their competitiveness, said Zhou Mi, a researcher with the Ministry of Commerce.

The country became a net capital exporter for the first time last year when outbound direct investment (ODI) outnumbered capital inflows. ODI grew 14.1 percent year on year in 2014, sharply eclipsing the 1.7 percent growth recorded for foreign direct investment. Enditem

Source Xinhua

Editor  Xuefei Chen Axelsson

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Interview: China-EU cooperation to help China’s fast growing digital economy: expert

   Interview: China-EU cooperation to help China’s fast growing digital economy: expert

 

BRUSSELS, May 26 (Greenpost) — The director general of BusinessEurope said in a recent interview with Xinhua that China-EU cooperation can help realize growth potential in China’s digital economy.

Markus J. Beyrer, director general of BusinessEurope, an association of enterprises in 33 European countries, said the digital industry is a game changer for the global economy and will have a huge impact on EU competitiveness.

Intelligent, interconnected systems now seamlessly support industrial activities along the entire value chain, he added.

Europe will have to reap the benefits of this huge potential, putting in place a real strategy to digitize all sectors of the economy.

He noted that by 2025, Europe’s manufacturing industry would gain a gross value worth 1.25 trillion euros (1.36 trillion U.S. dollars). However, he warned if Europe fail to turn the digital transformation to their advantage, the potential losses can be up to 600 billion euros by 2025 or over 10 percent of Europe’s industrial base.

Talking about China’s digital economy, Beyrer said China’s internet industry is growing fast, but until now it has largely been consumer-driven rather than enterprise-driven.

Large e-commerce firms have driven sales and transformed retailing, but small and medium sized enterprises still lag behind in using the internet for procurement, sales and marketing purposes, he said.

“It is clear that there is a lot of potential for growth in China’s digital economy too, China needs to liberalize its market to encourage new innovations and robust competition would accelerate China’s productivity,” said Beyrer.

Beyrer underlined that European companies have the required expertise and can help China realize its potential by engaging the Chinese market on commercial terms. Enditem

Source   Xinhua

Editor  Xuefei Chen Axelsson

 

China Focus: Chinese capital market accelerates deploying offshore RMB business

China Focus: Chinese capital market accelerates deploying offshore RMB business

 

BEIJING, May 27 (Greenpost) — Shanghai Stock Exchange (SSE), China Financial Futures Exchange (CFFEX) and Deutsche Bourse Group signed a strategic agreement on Wednesday to jointly initiate an offshore RMB financial instrument trading platform in Frankfurt, Germany, SSE said in a statement Wednesday.

Prior to this, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), the central bank, just expanded its pilot of RMB qualified foreign institutional investors (RQFII) to Chile on Monday, granting it a quota of 50 billion yuan (8 billion U.S. dollars).

Further more, officials from China’s securities regulator also disclosed that China will officially launch the Shenzhen-Hong Kong stock connect program in the second half of this year.

All signs show that China’s domestic capital market is speeding up deploying the offshore RMB business.

According to the strategic cooperation agreement of the three parties, they will incorporate a joint venture in Germany as the operator for the platform, said the statement.

The SSE, CFFEX and Deutsche Bourse will hold a stake of 40 percent, 20 percent and 40 percent in the new company, respectively.

The main functions of the company are to make R&D for offshore RMB-denominated securities and derivatives products and provide trading spot for these products, it said.

The new company is expected to start operation in the fourth quarter of 2015.

Dr. Gui Minjie, president of the SSE, expressed that the establishment of the platform will help promote the two-way opening up of China’s capital market, enrich investment tools for offshore RMB markets, and promote the RMB internationalization.

As a matter of fact, this is not the first time for China’s domestic capital market to cast its eye on massive offshore RMB markets.

In early 2012, a number of RQFII funds made their debut in Hong Kong and offered a back-flow channel for offshore RMB there, which marked the start of RQFII program.

The RQFII program keeps expanding, having lured 13 countries and regions to pilot the business after Chile’s entrance, with investment quota topping one trillion yuan.

On November 17, the Shanghai-Hong Kong stock connect program was officially kicked off, and over half of the 300-billion-yuan quota for the program has been used.

The launch of similar program in Shenzhen means the RMB will have a smoother investment and backflow channel.

Notably, the size of offshore RMB posted about a ten percent drop from a year earlier in the first quarter of this year due to the strong performance of the US dollar, which will not last long in the view of experts.

A report by the Deutsche Bank predicts the size of offshore RMB deposits will rebound as from April, will reach 3.25 trillion yuan by the end of this year, up 30 percent year on year.

Some scholars hold that RMB internationalization has become a key strategy for the opening up of China’s economy and financial industry.

Besides accumulating offshore RMB pool via trade and investment, desirable investment products and places are also needed for offshore RMB.

Therefore, China domestic capital’s deployment of offshore RMB markets will help further improve RMB’s international position. Enditem

Source Xinhua

Editor   Xuefei Chen Axelsson

China Focus: China makes challenging transition, RMB not undervalued: IMF

   China Focus: China makes challenging transition, RMB not undervalued: IMF

 

By Xinhua Writers Jiang Xufeng, Han Jie

Beijing, May 27 (Greenpost) — The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is closely following steps taken by China to promote the free use of its currency as the country undergoes a “challenging and necessary” economic transformation, a senior IMF official has said.

 

QUALITY GROWTH

Commenting on the country’s economic development over the past year, IMF first deputy managing director David Lipton said Chinese policymakers are pursuing a “quality-growth” strategy.

“They are not trying to achieve the fastest possible growth, but rather the fastest sustainable growth,” he said in an exclusive interview with Xinhua during a visit to Beijing.

“That means allowing the economy to slow, if that’s necessary, to work through some financial vulnerabilities that have built in areas like the property sector and excessive lending to state-owned enterprises.”

“Growth in China is moderating — a slowdown that is not a goal unto itself but a by-product of moving the economy away from the unsustainable growth pattern of the past decade.”

The Chinese economy grew 7.4 percent in 2014, the weakest annual expansion in 24 years. The government further lowered this year’s growth target to approximately 7 percent, stressing quality and innovation-driven growth.

On Tuesday, the IMF projected the Chinese economy would grow 6.8 percent this year, consistent with its April prediction in the flagship World Economic Outlook (WEO) report.

The world’s second largest economy is transitioning to a new normal, aimed at “safer and higher-quality” growth, and other economic reforms are underway including a new budget law, deposit interest rate liberalization, the creation of a deposit insurance scheme and a whole agenda for capital account liberalization, Lipton said.

“These are all items put in the ‘Third Plenum Blueprint’ and they are all being put into motion. Those measures will further help promote high-quality growth,” he said.

The Chinese labor market has remained resilient despite slower growth, which, in turn, has supported household consumption. Inflation is expected to end the year at around 1.5 percent, according to a statement issued after the IMF’s 2015 Article IV Consultation with China.

The Article IV Consultation is an annual economic and financial check-up between the IMF and its member countries. A mission from the IMF visited China from May 14 to 27 to conduct discussions on the annual review of the Chinese economy, and Lipton joined the mission’s final policy discussions.

If the Chinese economy slows a lot more,   fiscal policy should be used to bolster growth and boost household income and spending, so China can simultaneously reduce financial vulnerabilities and tap the potential of the “untapped growth engine”– household consumption, said Lipton, adding that rebalancing is the biggest challenge facing the Chinese economy.

The global economic recovery is “weak and uneven” and the economic slowdown is affecting developing countries in general as countries like China, to some extent, depend on advanced economies for exports, said Lipton, a former senior official at the White House.

 

RMB NOT UNDERVALUED

“While undervaluation of the renminbi (RMB) was a major factor causing the large imbalances in the past, our assessment now is that the substantial real effective appreciation over the past year has brought the exchange rate to a level that is no longer undervalued,” Lipton said after meeting with high-ranking Chinese officials.

This signaled a change of tone in the IMF’s judgment on

this issue after maintaining for a long time that RMB was “moderately undervalued”. Many experts believed that the value of RMB has reached equilibrium.

The value of RMB has been a source of tension between China and some trading partners, as they accuse China of keeping it artificially low to gain an unfair competitive advantage, which Beijing refuted.

Lipton stressed that it is a judgment “about this moment” and may change in the future.

“However, the still-too-strong external position highlights the need for other policy reforms–which are indeed part of the authorities’ agenda–to reduce excess savings and achieve sustained external balance,” Lipton said at a Tuesday press conference.

“We believe that China should aim to achieve an effectively floating exchange rate within 2-3 years,” he added.

China has adopted a steady pace in raising the yuan’s daily trading limit against the U.S. dollar, from 0.3 percent in 1994 to 0.5 percent in 2007 and 1 percent in 2012 to the latest 2 percent, in an effort to enhance the floating flexibility of the RMB exchange rate.

 

RMB’S SDR INCLUSION

Lipton said Chinese authorities have stated publicly their interest in including the renminbi in the IMF’s Special Drawing Rights (SDR) basket, a move that has been highly anticipated.

“We welcome and share this objective and will work closely with the Chinese authorities in this regard,” he said.

The IMF has launched its five-year review of the SDR basket, an international reserve asset that currently includes the U.S. dollar, Japanese yen, British pound and the euro. Whether to add the yuan to the basket is a major issue for this year’s assessment.

The review process will take a majority of this year, and “we are looking at the progress that’s been made in internationalization of renminbi and we are following very closely the steps that the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) is making and plans to make in order to promote the free use of renminbi internationally,” he told Xinhua.

“We hope that when we have done all that analysis and when the PBOC has undertaken these reforms, we will get to a proper conclusion,” Lipton added.

RMB has overtaken the Canadian and Australian dollars since November 2014 to enter the top five world payment currencies, trailing only the Japanese yen, British pound, euro and U.S. dollar, according to the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT).

“As the Managing Director of the IMF has said, RMB inclusion is not a matter of ‘if’ but ‘when’,” Lipton stressed. Enditem

Source Xinhua

Editor  Xuefei Chen Axelsson

China to formulate 5-year development plan for software, big data industry

 

   China to formulate 5-year development plan for software, big data industry

 

Stockholm, June 3 (Greenpost) — China will map out and carry out a 5-year development plan (2016-2020) for software and big data industry to incubate a group of highly competitive businesses, reported the Xinhua-run cnstock.com.cn Wednesday.

As the report told, the remarks were made by Miao Wei, minister of China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) on the Int’l Soft China 2015 open in Wednesday.

Besides, Miao said China would take measures to speed development of software industry, which is at the core of ICT, short for information, communication and technology, according to www.Chinanews.com.

As Miao spoke, the measures include those to encourage integration of software firms and industrial companies, quicken construction of safe and reliable information systems as well as R&D and industrialization of key technologies including industrial software, industrial operating systems, industrial Internet, intelligent autos, and industrial robotics, build industrial cloud platforms and big data centers, accelerate data share standards and establish a batch of crowd-creating space to activate innovation of small businesses. Enditem

Source Xinhua

Editor   Xuefei Chen Axelsson

China Focus: Belt and Road initiatives to spur infrastructure investment

China Focus: Belt and Road initiatives to spur infrastructure investment

Stockholm, May 8 (Greenpost) — The “One Belt and One Road” initiatives, also known as the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road initiatives, are very likely to boost physical infrastructure investment and facilitate the growth in the construction sector in China, according to market observers.
The Belt and Road initiatives are a Chinese framework for connecting economies in Asia Pacific and Europe.
Qiu Bo, an analyst at Guosen Securities Co., Ltd., said 2015 will be a year of infrastructure as Chinese government is now actively pushing ahead with its Belt and Road initiatives. The analyst added that the investment in infrastructure has become an important driving force behind domestic economic growth amid the domestic downturn.
According to market analysts, China’s infrastructure projects mainly include housing renovation projects in shanty towns, urban underground pipeline network construction, railways and roads construction in central and western regions, waterway projects in the inland areas, oil-and-gas pipelines construction, electric power equipment, and environmental protection projects.
China Galaxy Securities’ researcher Bao Furong said there is a great opportunity for infrastructure-related companies to grow in the year. He also believed the central bank’s latest interest rate cuts could help reduce financing costs for construction enterprises as they are highly indebted at the moment, adding that steel-and-rail-related companies listed in China will benefit most from the lower rates.
The People’s Bank of China, the central bank, has cut the benchmark interest rates twice since November 2014, and lowered the reserve requirement ratio twice in less than three months since the start of this year.
According to calculations by Shenwan Hongyuan Securities Co., Ltd., construction companies listed on the Shanghai and Shenzhen bourses reported an 11.3 percent growth in net profits in the first quarter of the year, quicker than a 1.4 percent growth pace for the fourth quarter of 2014.
As it appears from publicly disclosed financial reports, construction sector is rebounding from recession. Sun Peng, a researcher at Sinolink Securities Co., Ltd, predicted construction companies will see a further pickup in the year with massive new orders flooding into them.
Under such circumstances, market observers also said that belt and road initiatives may bring big profit opportunity for private investors who participate in the public-private partnership (PPP), a new model of developing public service projects that is funded and operated through cooperation between government and private sector companies. Enditem

Source Xinhua

Editor Xuefei Chen Axelsson

China to promote ppp mode in transportation, environment, medicare and old-age sectors

CHN to promote PPP mode in transportation, envir’l protection, medicare, old-age sectors

Stockholm, June 3 (Greenpost) — The State Council, China’s cabinet, pledged to expand the public-private-partnership (PPP) mode to transportation, environmental protection, medical care and old-age sectors on Wednesday.
China will promote the cooperation between governments and social funds to increase the supply of public products and service, which is a key measure to transform government functions, unleash market vitality and foster new growth impetus, according to a statement released after a State Council executive meeting presided over by Premier Li Keqiang.
According to the meeting, China will try to streamline administrative review procedures and attract social funds to participate in the investment and management of public projects.
Meanwhile, the subjects in charge of project operation are encouraged to finance directly through the capital market.
A dynamic adjustment mechanism for public service prices should be established to ensure mutual benefit of both the public and social funds. Enditem

 

Source  Xinhua

Editor  Xuefei Chen Axelsson

 

Developed countries dominate in 2015 Human Capital Index, China ranks 64th: WEF

Developed countries dominate in 2015 Human Capital Index, China ranks 64th: WEF
Stockholm, June 3(Greenpost) — Developed countries have dominated the rankings of the Human Capital Index in 2015, with China ranked 64th out of 124 economies, according to the World Economic Forum’s (WEF) Human Capital Report released Wednesday.
The index aims at assessing the outcome of past and present investments in human capital and offering insights into what a country’s talent base will look like in the future.
It evaluated the levels of education, skills and employment available to people in five distinct age groups, starting from under 15 years to over 65 years.
Globally, Finland topped the rankings of the Human Capital Index in 2015, scoring 86 percent of its human capital, followed by Norway, Switzerland, Canada and Japan.
Sweden, Denmark, the Netherlands, New Zealand and Belgium also seized the places in the top 10 list.
Among other large advanced economies, France is in 14th position, while the United States is in 17th position, scoring just under 80. Britain holds the 19th spot and Germany 22nd.
China ranked 64th out of a total of 124 economies, optimizing 67 percent of its human capital.
According to the index, China’s under-15 group and 15-24 group maintained their competitiveness over the human capital, ranked 55th and 58th respectively. However, China’s 25-54 group and 55-64 group are in 61th and 83th position.
Among other BRICS nations, Russia ranked 26th and Brazil is in 78th place, followed by South Africa (92) and India (100).
“Talent, not capital, will be the key factor linking innovation, competitiveness and growth in the 21st century. To make any of the changes necessary to unlock the world’s latent talent we must look beyond campaign cycles and quarterly reports,” said Klaus Schwab, founder and executive chairman of the WEF. Enditem

source Xinhua

Editor  Xuefei Chen Axelsson

Interview: Lombardy region president pushes for more Chinese investors

Interview: Lombardy region president pushes for more Chinese investors

 

by Grandesso Federico and Yan Lei

Milan, Italy, April 29 (Greenpost) — “More Chinese investors should come to Lombardy, they are welcome, there are many opportunities in the region and we are going to show them during the Expo,” Roberto Maroni, president of Lombardy Region said.

“There are many success stories, all investors are welcome, now we promote an initiative called ‘invest in Lombardy’ because we value your business,” the president said in an exclusive interview with Xinhua two days before the opening of Expo Milano.

” We have a vocation to innovation and research, we have 13 universities, 500 research centers both private and public, all the most important ICT companies are based in Milan and Lombardy,” he added.

Lombardy enjoys an exceptional climate for entrepreneurs and the president explains that there are one million companies out of ten million inhabitants, these companies are mainly SMEs and called “family companies ” which need help to be competitive in the world so investments from outside are welcome. Lombardy hosts 18,000 foreign companies.

He said: “For us, to attract investments means not only to come here with a new company and do what you normally do in China but we want to magnetize investment funds to help our companies to become part of our economic system.”

He said: “Investors have many choices; our ICT companies are excellent, some of them are even collaborating with NASA; then we are considered a number one manufacturing region,” he continued.

“Lombardy is agriculture and food production region in Italy, for example, a company near Brescia produces 24 tons of caviar per year exporting it even to Russia,” he said.

According to Maroni new investors can help the brand of “Made in Italy”. He explained that the Italian style and the Made in Italy is something unique and the problem is that most of the more successful Italian products are not produced in Italy.

“As food is concerned the total Italian export per year is 30 billion euros while the so called ‘Italian sounding’ or fake Italian is 60 billion euros,” he added.

“For this reason we welcome investment in the Made in Italy because this reinforces our possibility to increase the volumes of export,” the president explained.

Maroni said: “In 2013 Lombardy exported to China products for more than 3 billion euros while we imported products of 9 billion euros and our exports to China have increased 6 percent from 2012. Then over 100 Lombardy companies are involved with China with a total amount turnover of over 4 billion euros and more than 6000 employees.”

Maroni said he wants to visit China. “Till now I didn’t manage it but I want to go, I know the country and its evolution. I’m very impressed with the Chinese evolution from many points of view starting from the economy, the new landscapes in many towns and the rate of speed they have in every fields,” he said.

“China is more and more appreciated by the Italians and we want to support this evolution thanks to good relations between Lombardy, Italy and China,” he explained.

The president concluded his interview with a message: “Come to visit the Expo, Milan and Lombardy. Lombardy is a world heritage site, we have ten UNESCO sites. You have to visit our beauties and meet with our culture and food.” Enditem

Source Xinhua

Editor Xuefei Chen Axelsson

China Focus: China issues guideline for eco-friendly developmen

China Focus: China issues guideline for eco-friendly development

 

BEIJING, May 5 (Xinhua) — China’s cabinet on Tuesday published a guideline on improving the country’s environment, vowing to achieve “major progress” in the area by 2020.

In the 35-clause guideline, the State Council stressed the need to consider environmental protection when planning economic and social development, and to raise public awareness about the environment.

China’s safeguarding of the environment still lags behind its economic status, with prominent problems such as limited resources and severe pollution becoming major bottlenecks for sustainable growth, the guideline noted.

It called for more economical and efficient use of resources. By 2020, China aims to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 40 to 45 percent from the 2005 level, and increase the share of non-fossil fuels in primary energy consumption to around 15 percent, according to the guideline.

Other targets include a steady improvement in water and soil quality, forestry and wetland coverage.

The guideline also stressed efforts to promote green urbanization and strengthen protection of ocean resources.

Decades of breakneck growth in China have dried up resources and left the country saddled with problems including smog and contaminated waterways.

In 2014, only eight of 74 major Chinese cities subject to PM 2.5 air quality monitoring met the national standard for clear air, according to data released by the Ministry of Environmental Protection (MEP).

Another MEP report released in June 2014 revealed that some 60 percent of ground water checked by 4,778 monitoring stations was rated as “bad” or “very bad”.

To strike a balance between growth and environment, China declared a “war against pollution” last year, calling for tougher regulations over polluting industries.

In his annual government report in March, Premier Li Keqiang pledged to take “a firm and unrelenting approach to ensure blue skies, clear waters, and sustainable development”.

Steady progress is being made. A new environmental law launched in January has toughened penalties for pollution and made clear that public-interest groups have the right to sue liable parties.

Earlier this month, the State Council unveiled a detailed action plan to fight water pollution. It said more than 70 percent of the water in the seven major river valleys, including the Yangtze and Yellow rivers, should be in good condition by 2020. The same target is set for offshore areas. Small factories in sectors including paper, insecticides and tanning will be shut down by the end of 2016.

And with Tuesday’s announcement of the overall roadmap, analysts expect more detailed regulations to follow.

“The key for the next step is whether we can seriously implement the guideline,” noted Wang Yi, head of the Institute of Policy and Management under the Chinese Academy of Sciences. Enditem

 

Source Xinhua

Editor  Xuefei Chen Axlesson

 

China Focus: Online money market funds lose luster

China Focus: Online money market funds lose luster

 

Stockholm, June2 (Greenpost) — Online money market funds (MMFs) are losing their appeal to Chinese investors who crave higher yields in the stock market.

Combined assets of online MMFs totaled 1.36 trillion yuan (222 billion U.S. dollars) at the end of the first quarter, down 9.8 percent from the previous quarter, according to data from Beijing-based lending information provider Rong360.com.

The figure was a sizable reduction compared to a peak of 1.56 trillion yuan at the end of September 2014.

Analysts said a bullish stock market has drawn money away from online MMFs.

The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index has gained more than 30 percent since the start of this year, accompanied by a frenzy of new accounts and record turnover.

Rong360.com analyst Xu Jin said that a huge amount of capital has flowed out of bank deposits and online MMFs into the stock market, feeding the market’s steady climb.

Online MMFs offered annualized interest rates of nearly 7 percent when they first became popular in 2013, but the current rate has fallen to around 4 percent, another reason they have lost their allure, according to Xu.

The falling yields accompanied two interest rate cuts and two drops in banks’ reserve requirement ratio by the central bank since November of last year.

Despite the general decline, Alibaba’s Yu’e Bao, the most popular and largest online MMF, was an exception. Its first quarter report showed assets had reached 712 billion yuan as of the end of March, up 23 percent from three months ago.

Alastair Sewell, Senior Director of Fund & Asset Manager Ratings at Fitch Ratings, said the relative ease and convenience of online MMFs have made them wildly popular and a key wealth management tool for average investors.

Yu’e Bao can be used for online purchases, taxis, credit card payments, mortgage payments, and even utilities such as water and electricity. It also offers instant redemption and no-fee money transfers between bank accounts.

However, Sewell warned that online MMFs have a less stable investor base with yield-hungry retail investors susceptible to herd behavior, which could result in a mass outflow of funds. Enditem

Source  Xinhua

Editor Xuefei Chen Axelsson