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Brokers in China Seen Restricting Cross-Border Stock Trades

Officials ramp up moves to stem selloff of Chinese stocks, restricting the amount of cross-border swap deals domestic investors can undertake


Sources said local CICC clients have not been able to add new positions via total return swaps, to make overseas investments, as it and other brokers seek to limit their derivative books. Photo: Reuters.

 

Chinese officials have implemented further moves this week to defend the country’s weak stock markets.

Local brokerages such as the giant state-owned China International Capital Corp (CICC) have restricted the amount of cross-border swap transactions domestic investors can undertake, multiple sources said on Tuesday.

Domestic CICC clients have not been able to add new positions via total return swaps, to make overseas investments, as the broker seeks to limit its derivatives book, the sources said. At least three other major Chinese state brokerages have taken a similar approach.

 

ALSO SEE: Critics Say China’s ‘National Team’ Can’t Fix Its Sinking Markets

 

A total return swap (TRS) is a financial derivative contract where one party agrees to pay or receive the total return of an underlying asset in exchange for a fixed or variable financing rate from the other party.

It has been a popular over the counter (OTC) cross-border derivative for Chinese onshore funds, especially hedge funds, to access offshore stock markets, effectively side-stepping restrictions on capital flows.

The restrictions could thwart domestic fund managers who were tapping TRS to short-sell offshore China stocks, such as China A50-related contracts, one source with direct knowledge of the curbs said. This will also allow brokers to limit overall exposure to derivatives, he said.

CICC is among 10 major brokerages in China licensed to provide TRS services, and is a top player. The group did not respond to Reuters’ requests for comment.

The measures come as the Shanghai stock market faces renewed pressure and plumbs multi-year lows. The country’s securities regulator has vowed to prevent abnormal market fluctuations and crack down on “ill-intended short selling”.

China’s blue-chip CSI300 Index tumbled nearly 5% last week to the lowest since early 2019, amid signs of panic selling and forced liquidation of leveraged trades.

The outstanding balance of cross-border OTC derivatives at Chinese brokerages, including TRS and OTC options, amounted to 825.4 billion yuan ($114.7 billion) by the end of November 2023, up 8.5% from October, according to official data published by Chinese newspaper Securities Times.

Shorting Chinese equities has been a crowded trade among global funds seeking to profit from the woes of the world’s second-largest economy.

Chinese authorities have been ramping up efforts to stem the selloff in Chinese stocks, including suspension of lending of restricted shares for short selling and curbs on leveraged stock trades.

A brokerage source said the firm had been limiting the new volume of cross-border TRS business since late last year, when regulators told brokers to curtail leverage for derivatives.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

ALSO SEE:

 

Hedge Funds Snapped up China Stocks at Rapid Pace – Goldman

 

China Equity Funds See Biggest Weekly Inflow in Years – BofA

 

China Markets Bounce on Moves to Reverse 3 Years of Declines

 

China Central Bank Chief Vows 50bps RRR Cut to Boost Economy

 

China Told Only Major Intervention Can Turn Economy Around

 

Losses on $50bn Leveraged Products Behind China Stocks Plunge

 

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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