Gwyn Roberts

20/01/2010 Author: Gwyn Roberts

A blueprint of China's hedge fund industry

China’s short-selling experiment barely bothered headline writers last week. Yet, the likely shape of the country’s nascent hedge fund industry was still summed up in print, with stories about both trade figures and Google demonstrating how China's alternatives industry may develop.

Replacing Germany as the globe’s largest exporter was largely a symbolic handover of power. But it was also testament to China’s adeptness at snagging the means of production, in the form of foreign steel companies, mining interests and mineral rights.

A growing domestic hedge fund industry would likely follow a similar tack, by simply buying the supply chain. Bank of China Suisse already has plans to launch a fund of hedge funds, and the CIC is making big allocations, with speculation that this seeding operation may well turn to a direct purchase of single manager funds and investment talent.

The restrictive state practices that have led to continued sabre-rattling from Google will undoubtedly also colour a regional hedge fund industry. Shorting will be permitted, but the access granted to foreign managers remains uncertain and the Chinese Government is likely to call time if things get too volatile.  

Unfair? Yes. But China expounds a very idiosyncratic vision of capitalism and its controlled version of hedge fund investing could work. In fact, its short-selling experiment may still make headlines yet

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