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In Singapore, A New China A-Shares ETF

Source: http://www.indexuniverse.com/sections/newsinfocus/6804-in-singapore-a-new-china-a-shares-etf.html?Itemid=3&utm_source=straightstocks.com&utm_medium=sidebar&utm_campaign=rss
Posted on Tuesday, October 27th, 2009 | In Exchange Traded Funds, Investing Lessons
Contributed by: IndexUniverse Staff (http://indexuniverse.com) -

 

A new ETF giving access to Chinese A shares is to be launched in Singapore next month.

The United FTSE Xinhua China A50 ETF, to be offered by the asset management subsidiary of United Overseas Bank (UOB), will be the first China A-shares fund to be denominated and traded in Singapore dollars.

Chinese A shares are denominated and traded in Chinese yuan and listed on the Shanghai or Shenzhen stock exchanges. Historically, access to the A-shares market in China has been limited to Chinese nationals and qualified foreign institutional investors (QFIIs) approved by the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC).

The FTSE Xinhua China A50 Index is designed to measure the performance of the 50 largest China A-shares companies, based on market capitalization.

ETFs tracking A shares are already dominant in the Asian market. The Hong Kong-listed iShares Asia Trust, which also tracks the FTSE Xinhua A50 Index, is the largest Asian ETF, with $6.7 billion under management. The China 50 ETF, which tracks the Shanghai Stock Exchange 50 Index, has $3.2 billion under management and is the most heavily traded Asian ETF, with an average daily volume of $200 million in the week ending Oct. 16.

According to Singapore’s Business Times, while the upper limit on the QFII quota for any single investor to invest in China stocks is $1 billion, the quota available for the United FTSE Xinhua China A50 ETF is $100 million, as UOB and Rabobank—the counterparty and designated market maker for this ETF—each have a QFII quota of $50 million.

The iShares Asia Trust does not hold A shares directly; rather, it holds Chinese A-Shares access products (CAAPs) issued by a connected person of a QFII. A CAAP is a security (such as a warrant, note or participation certificate) linked to an A share that synthetically replicates the economic benefit of the relevant A share but carries counterparty risk to the CAAP issuer.

Because of the existence of QFII quotas, A-share ETFs have often traded at premiums to net asset value during periods of significant investor demand.

Outside Asia, investors are generally restricted to ETFs tracking H shares (firms that are incorporated in China but listed in Hong Kong); Red Chips (firms incorporated in Hong Kong with substantial mainland interests, controlled by the Chinese government); P Chips (Hong Kong-incorporated firms with substantial mainland interests that are not under government control); and China-related shares listed on overseas stock exchanges. (IndexUniverse.eu recently published a feature on the range of options available to investors interested in the Chinese stock markets.)

According to the issuer, the total expense ratio for the United FTSE Xinhua China A50 ETF is estimated to be 0.95 percent. The iShares Asia Trust has a TER of 1.39 percent and the China 50 ETF has a TER of 0.50 percent, as per the latest edition of Deutsche Bank’s ETF Liquidity Trends report.

 

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About IndexUniverse Staff (http://indexuniverse.com)
IndexUniverse encompasses the world of indexing and beyond. Our website and related subsites cover product and market developments related to index funds, exchange-traded funds (ETFs), index derivatives (futures / options / swaps), and the sophisticated investment strategies which use these financial tools. Our goal is to provide the industry's best news, columns, research, and features about the dynamic field of index-based investing and trading. Industry professionals, individual investors, business/finance students and academic researchers will find various features targeting their interests and needs. We also provide valuable tools and data to assess markets and investment products, and specialized discussion boards for our registered members to exchange cutting-edge ideas and market views. We aim to be educational, thought-provoking, and most importantly, rigorously independent in our perspective.

The development of IndexUniverse was a global effort, originally led by Steven Schoenfeld and Jim Wiandt, supported by John Spence and a diverse team in the U.S., Europe and Latin America, and enhanced by editorial contributors from around the world. The site is now managed solely by Jim Wiandt and the global Index Publications LLC team. The site was originally started by Steven as a data and information complement to his book, Active Index Investing, published by Wiley Finance in July 2004. As he recognized the need and potential for such a resource, in August 2003, Steven partnered with Jim, who as editor of The Journal of Indexes similarly recognized the industry's need for timely, useful and independent information on products and markets.

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