New policy announcements likely to channel more-capital from companies based in Hong Kong.
The Chinese mainland is accelerating the opening of its financial service industry, by offering favorable land and tax policies to attract more Hong Kong-based companies to invest and operate in a business zone in Shenzhen, Guangdong province.
Known as Qianhai Shenzhen-Hong Kong Modern Service Cooperation Zone, the $65 billion project has been viewed as a testing ground for China to reform its service industry and to further open the country’s capital market and to internationalize its currency.
The Shenzhen government said that at least one-third of the zone’s land will be reserved for Hong Kong companies to build trading facilities for banks, securities brokers, insurers and mutual funds.
Employees from Hong Kong who have special skills and work at companies established in the business zone will qualify for a lower tax rate.
The mainland will also expand a pilot program involving cross-border yuan loans made by Hong Kong-based banks to non-banking financial institutions, according to Zhang Bei, director of the Qianhai administration.
“The program will create a channel for offshore yuan to flow back to the mainland, and will help accelerate China’s liberalization of the interest rate,” Zhang said at a news conference in Beijing on Dec 4.
Cross-border yuan loans in Qianhai have reached 73.8 billion yuan ($12 billion), and there were more than 10,000 financial companies with operations in Qianhai as of Nov 30, according to the Shenzhen government.
Shenzhen was China’s first special economic zone, known for pilot market reforms in the 1980s that were later applied across the country.
The city may also offer Hong Kong companies owned by mainlanders the status of domestic companies in Qianhai. Previously, Hong Kong-based companies were treated as overseas companies.