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Mumbai:
Preparations for
setting up China''s first stock-index futures have been basically finished, Shang
Fulin, head of the country''s securities market regulator, said. Shang,
chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), said preparations
in terms of technology and mechanism are near completion, but he did not give
a specific date for putting the futures into operation. "Stock-index
futures is a big issue for China''s capital market," he said, noting that
China still lacks the experience in derivative financial products. Investors still
need to get prepared, he said, adding that it will debut "when the conditions
are ripe." The
stock-index futures is usually used as a tool against drastic fluctuations in
the stock market. Shang
was addressing a plenary session at the inaugural annual meeting of the `New Champions''
hosted by the World Economic Forum in China''s northeastern coastal city of Dalian.
Media
reports said qualified foreign institutional investors (QFII) would be authorised
to participate in stock-index futures trading in China, but the China regulator
declined to comment. Shang,
however, assured foreign investors that the CSRC will resume the approval of Sino-foreign
securities joint ventures. "Allowing
foreign capital into China''s securities business will help promote the capabilities
of the whole industry," he said, adding that the commission is engaged in
research on the resumption.
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