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In addition to sovereign wealth investment funds

Posted: Sun Feb 16, 2025 5:00 am
by Rina7RS
For example, in terms of QDII quotas, can we consider further accelerating the liberalization to allow fund institutions to issue more relevant cross-border ETF products to the market?

According to data, the issuance of domestic QDII funds has accelerated since 2021. As of the latest data in January 2025, there are 304 QDIIs in the city, with 577.162 billion shares and a net asset value of 521.81 billion yuan. However, compared with the current A-shares of more than 80 trillion yuan and the scale of public funds of nearly 32 trillion yuan, it is still relatively small. Moreover, a large proportion of QDII funds are products for the Hong Kong stock market. Products that truly invest purely abroad are still relatively insufficient.



At the same time, if more cross-border ETF products can be ivory coast telegram data issued, it will also bring many significant benefits to the A-share market.

Firstly, there are indeed many good capital investment opportunities in the global market, and the globalization of financial investment is also the way of many mainstream countries. in the name of national entities, which often amount to trillions of dollars, such as the Norwegian Government Pension Fund Global GPFG and the Saudi Public Investment Fund PIF, which we often see, there are also various consortiums and funds in a larger number of institutional forms. For example, BlackRock managing assets of over US26 trillion, Vanguard managing assets of over US26 trillion, Fidelity Investments managing assets of over US4 trillion, Blackstone, KKR, etc. Of course, we also have sovereign wealth investment funds such as Central Huijin Investment and China Huaan Investment.