by Albee Zhang with John Biers in New York
Agence France-Presse
SHANGHAI, China (AFP) — China on Wednesday hailed the acceptance of its stocks in a leading United States-based index of emerging market shares as a signal of confidence in the Asian power’s economy after three previous rejections.
The Shanghai and Shenzhen stock markets opened higher after New York’s MSCI agreed to include 222 large capitalization Chinese stocks in its MSCI Emerging Markets Index, representing 0.73 percent of the index.
MSCI’s decision has been closely watched as a sign of China’s growing importance on international financial markets.
“We applaud and appreciate MSCI for making such a decision,” said Zhang Xiaojun, spokesperson for the China Securities Regulatory Commission.
“It showed international investors’ confidence in a stable Chinese economy with better prospects and in the steadiness of China’s financial market,” Zhang said.
The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index jumped 0.29 percent while the Shenzhen Composite Index, which tracks stocks on China’s second exchange, gained 0.24 percent in early trading.
MSCI said the move has “broad support” from international institutional investors and was the result of loosening of restrictions enacted by China on foreign ownership of “A” shares — stock in mainland China-based companies — ownership of which had once been limited to mainland citizens.
“International investors have embraced the positive changes in the accessibility of the China A shares market over the last few years and now all conditions are set for MSCI to proceed with the first step of the inclusion,” said Remy Briand, MSCI managing director.
“MSCI is very hopeful that the momentum of positive change witnessed in China over the past years will continue to accelerate.”
‘Token inclusion’
MSCI says its emerging markets index is tracked by more than $1.5 trillion in assets. The company said the Chinese representation in the index could be increased in time if China enacts additional reforms.
MSCI has in the past cited obstacles such as China’s restrictions on market access and on moving capital in and out of the country. Prior to Tuesday’s decision, it had excluded Chinese shares for three years in a row.
“We reflected the comments from the institutional investor community. They (Chinese officials) took them very seriously and acted upon some of them,” MSCI chief executive Henry Fernandez told CNBC.
Institutional investors praised a decrease in the number of stock suspensions in China, but said the current level is still an “outlier” compared with other markets, MSCI said.
Chinese shares will go into a number of provisional indices before they are included in the flagship index starting in June 2018.
China’s addition would help around $8 billion flow into its stock markets, Capital Economics said, describing it as “a token inclusion” given that the weighting would be the equivalent of 0.1 percent of the domestic market’s capitalization.
Opens the door
Analysts nevertheless said China’s admission to the index would be a good start.
“A low number of shares and weighting is not important at the beginning,” said Li Daxiao, chief economist at Yingda Securities.
“It is like opening a door. Even if it is just a crack, it is a huge improvement compared to being completely shut.”
Citic Securities analyst Zhang Qun said inclusion would have “more of an emotional effect than a practical one.”
“It is the change from zero to one. If in the next few years the degree of opening up increases… then it could go from one to 10 or even 100,” Zhang said.