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FIA Asia Derivatives Conference “Doing business in China” Perspectives of Man Financial Mr. Simon Raybould Chief Executive Officer Man Financial Hong Kong Beijing August 2005.
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FIA Asia Derivatives Conference “Doing business in China” Perspectives of Man Financial Mr. Simon Raybould Chief Executive Officer Man Financial Hong Kong Beijing August 2005
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“Doing business in China” • Man Financial: profile & business flows • Perspective on the state of the Mainland Marketplace • What are Man Financial’s strategic goals with regard to China?
Man Financial: profile & business flows Man Group, plcFocused on Exchange Traded Business MF offices: London, New York, Chicago, Paris, Taipei, Singapore, Sydney
Man Financial: profile & business flows Man Financial – Exchange rankings as at March 2005
Man Financial: profile & business flows • Man Metals • 17 percent of market share on London Metal Exchange • China business flows built upon end user hedging requirements Man Market Share *Man side of every “RT” trade
Man Financial: profile & business flows 2004 Broker Rankingsinternational survey of corporate risk managers # BASE METALS RANKINGS: 9 • Cash (Man Financial #1) • Forwards (Man Financial #1) • Options (Man Financial #1) • Cash (Man Financial #1) • Forwards (Man Financial #2) • Options (Man Financial #1) • Cash (Man Financial #1) • Forwards (Man Financial #1) • Options (Man Financial #1) COPPER ALUMINUM OTHER BASE METALS
State of the Mainland Marketplace • State of Mainland Marketplace • Strategic Relationships: • Joint Ventures & acquisitions • Closer Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) • Recent Structural changes: • Access to Mainland Futures planned for Foreign Investors • QFII quota increased • Mainland futures brokers to trade international futures • State of the Mainland Securities business: • State of Mainland Securities Brokerage Industry
State of the Mainland Marketplace • Access to Mainland Futures planned for Foreign Investors • Plans to allow QFIIs to trade domestic futures market. • Yang Maijun, director of CSRC Futures Supervision Dept: • “China’s futures market is short of big institutional players” • “Development of the market hasn’t caught up with investor’s demand” • Currently there are 11 Mainland futures contracts covering agriculture products, fuel oil and metals, with plans to approve contracts for sugar and steel wire. • Yang Maijun: CSRC would make agricultural and strategic resource commodities a priority for developing new future products. • Bloomberg 30 May 2005 • China Economic Review July 2005
State of the Mainland Marketplace • QFII Quota increased • Investment quota scheme on the amount invested by global money managers in Yuan denominated securities (ie A shares & bonds) • Total QFII quota amount to increase from $4bn (less than 1% of total market cap) to $10bn. • Data suggests almost one-third of foreign investors’ QFII allocations are being kept in cash. • Source: Xinhua News Agency 13 July 2005 & Asiamoney, 1 April 2005
State of the Mainland Marketplace • Mainland futures brokers to trade international futures • Pilot program approved by State Council • Mainland futures brokerage firms to trade overseas futures on behalf of local mainland firms. • Previously, only selected state-owned firms permitted to hedge physical requirements. • AWSJ 17 June 2005
State of the Mainland Marketplace • State of the Mainland Securities Brokerage Industry • Approx 120 brokerages – majority of income is trading fees • Brokerage Industry lost 15bn Yuan last year • State media have reported a 45 percent drop in revenue for Chinese brokerages during the first half of 2005: • Mainland brokerages combined revenue: 9.57bn Yuan (vs 17.47bn first half 04). • Securities houses collected 8.3bn Yuan in brokerage (vs 15.26bn first half 04) • Revenue from Underwriting 345m Yuan (vs 829m first half 04) • Many Mainland brokerages have applied to PBOC for bailout loans. PBOC have said 10bn Yuan in cheap financing available for better performers. • CSRC spokesman: (SCMP 28 July 2005) • hard to predict how many more of China’s approximately 120 remaining brokerages would be shut down • hinted that more closures were expected • “One-hundred-and-twenty brokerages is more than the market needs” • SCMP: 2 July 2005 & 19 July 2005 & 28 July 2005, China Economic Review July 2005
Man Financial Perspective • Required developments from the perspective of Man Financial: • FX • Banking procedures • Corporate Governance • Bond Market • Money Market
Man Financial Perspective • Man Financial values building relationships with: • Regulators • People’s Bank of China (PBOC) • State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) • China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) • China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) • Exchanges • Shanghai Futures Exchange • Dalian Commodity Exchange • Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange • Shanghai Stock Exchange • Shenzhen Stock Exchange
Man Financial Perspective • Differing Customer Profiles: • Man Financial • China • Need for Education • Understandingthe cash markets • Transparency
China Mission Statement • Continue to expand legitimate institutional customer base on the Mainland. • Build links with Mainland brokers. • Push for access to Chinese product base for our own international customer base. • Be part of the educational process and development of the Chinese derivative markets. www.manfinancial.com