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BlackRock Seen Planning First China ETF Product This Year

BlackRock plans to launch its first product in China’s $220 billion onshore exchange-traded fund (ETF) market later this year and has started hiring staff, sources say


BlackRock has slashed its monthly fees by 90% for Chinese investors in its two retail funds, due to weak investor interest.
The move applies to the BlackRock China New Horizon Mixed Securities Investment Fund and BlackRock Hong Kong Stock Connect Long Horizon Mixed Securities Investment Fund. File photo: Reuters.

 

BlackRock plans to launch its first China ETF – its first product in China’s $220 billion onshore exchange-traded fund market – later this year and has started hiring staff accordingly, two sources have revealed.

The world’s largest money manager, which thrives on the rise of passive investing with 70% of its $10 trillion global portfolio in ETFs and index funds, will be the first wholly owned foreign fund manager to tap the onshore Chinese ETF market.

Currently, the US firm manages overseas assets of a handful of China’s large state-backed investors such as the country’s sovereign wealth fund and national pension fund via offshore units, as all products sold are foreign-domiciled.

The first BlackRock ETF product launch is scheduled for the fourth quarter, said the people, which will add to 6.8 billion yuan ($1.07 billion) worth of assets BlackRock manages through two mutual funds with investments in Chinese and Hong Kong stocks.

Several index providers have started talks with BlackRock but the fund manager is yet to decide which index to track for the first ETF product, the people told Reuters.

Options under consideration include a carbon neutrality-themed index composed by China Securities Index Co, one of the people said. China has seen dozens of environment-linked ETF launches in the last two years betting on buoyant new-energy stocks.

“BlackRock is committed to helping more Chinese investors achieve their financial goals by bringing them a broader suite of investment products and solutions, including ETF and index investments,” the company said in a statement.

It said it is “investing in more local talent” to support its “growth priority.”

China Securities Index did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

BlackRock’s planned foray into the fast-growing ETF sector in the China stock market comes against a backdrop of continued opening up of the financial market in the world’s second-largest economy.

The move will also bolster the fund manager’s presence in China, after it became the first global asset manager licensed to start a wholly owned onshore mutual fund business in the country last year.

BlackRock’s ETF operation in China is set to open doors to local institutional as well as retail investors.

 

LUCRATIVE MARKET

China’s nascent $220 billion ETF market with over 600 products as at the end of 2021 has only in recent years started contributing meaningfully to a global passive fund boom that catapulted the sector beyond $10 trillion in value.

Assets in China’s onshore ETFs expanded 30.5% in 2021, almost on a par with the 31.9% growth rate of US ETFs, but better than European peers’ 24.7% growth, according to data from the Shenzhen Stock Exchange.

BlackRock’s iShares, which “remained a significant growth driver” in 2021, according to chairman and chief executive Larry Fink, drew in $306 billion assets last year, accounting for 57% of new money into all of the firm’s active and passive offerings.

For its China ETF foray, BlackRock is recruiting for roles across ETF portfolio management, operations and focused marketing, the two people said. The firm initially plans to form a team of five to six employees, they said.

Measures to stop the spread of Covid-19 have largely curbed business activity in Shanghai, with candidate interviews being moved online, one of the people said.

BlackRock’s Shanghai office currently has at least 70 staff, fund association data shows, and is set to recruit over 15 more, excluding the ETF hires, according to company job adverts.

Since China allowed fully foreign-owned fund units in 2019, a flurry of foreign fund houses, including US-based ETF specialist VanEck, have applied for licences to operate in the local fund market.

Most of the equities ETFs in China charge a 0.5% management fee per annum, higher than 10 to 20 basis points charged by managers of such products in the US and Europe, making it a lucrative market for foreigners.

The country’s 10 largest ETF providers, most of them local players, control over 80% of market share.

 

• Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

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Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.

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