Trade Sourcing Trade Show B2B Web Search Engine Web Directory Company Directory Manufacturer Directory Supplier List News

Trade News
China News, Industry News

 

Funds News
  • Funds trade at discounts as foreign investors flee
    Date: 22-May-2007 Sources: (Shenzhen Daily)

    HOW overvalued are domestically listed shares in the eyes of foreigners?

    As much as 16 percent, based on two China equity funds for foreigners that trade at discounts to their underlying stocks.

    As foreign investors increasingly question whether China's roaring stock market is heading for a crash, overseas-traded China funds which have more than doubled in value last year are now steeply discounted.

    At the start of the year, the same funds traded at premiums of as much as 20 percent above the value of their underlying stocks, as overseas investors with limited access to A shares listed in Shanghai and Shenzhen crowded into the few vehicles available to them.

    'Foreign investors are unwilling to buy A shares at the current price levels,'said Joseph Ho, regional director of Barclays Global Investors North Asia, which manages the Hong Kong-listed A50 China Tracker, one of a small handful of funds developed for ordinary offshore investors to access mainland-listed stocks.

    The A50 China Tracker finished April at a price that was 16.6 percent less than the value of its underlying 50 blue chip stocks, including CITIC Securities, China Merchants Bank and real-estate developer China Vanke.

    That compares with a premium in excess of 20 percent at the beginning of January, when foreigners flocked to surging China equities.

    'Recently demand for A50 has shrunk,'said Justin Kennedy, who heads Asia Pacific trading and derivatives at Citigroup, A50's market maker.

    'Investors are selling it, switching to H shares,'he said, referring to shares of mainland companies traded in Hong Kong.

    Because investors are not permitted to short sell mainland stocks, some hedge funds that are able to buy mainland-listed stocks short sell overseas-traded mainland funds as an imperfect hedge to reduce their risks.

    The selling pressure is so big that Citigroup said it is impossible to close the gap by intervention.

    Since April, Citigroup has been aggressively buying the undervalued A50 funds, redeeming them for A shares, and selling them for a profit on the mainland. The fund is designed in such a way that only the market makers are allowed to redeem the funds' underlying shares.

    The intervention has resulted in a 25 percent decrease in total units outstanding and the price gap has been narrowed to 8 percent as of last week.

    Citing uncertainty about a capital gains tax, Kennedy said he is also bound by Citigroup's compliance department about how many A shares he can sell.

    Similarly, Morgan Stanley's China A-share fund has been traded at a discount of about 15 percent in late April, compared with a premium of as much as 18 percent in January.

    Exchange-traded funds are supposed to closely track their underlying assets because of their built-in arbitrage mechanics. They sometimes trade at premiums in countries where currencies are controlled, reflecting the cost to access that market.



    Sponsor Results:




Home | Trade Show | B2B Web | Search Engine | Web Directory | Company Directory | Manufacturer Directory | Supplier List | Big Buyer | About Us

Copyright © 2007 TradeSourcing.com / Haibo Network Inc.
[贸易资源、海博网络、专业服务外贸企业、外贸网站建设、产品海外推广]
Trade Sources, Trade News, China News, Industry News