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Cash flood seen in insurance reform

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Regulatory change may funnel billions of fresh yuan into mainland stock markets

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Mainland insurers may soon be able to invest in domestic stocks for the first time, a regulatory reform that could channel billions of yuan into the country's share markets.

Under a draft rule being circulated for consultation by mainland regulators, insurers would be allowed to invest up to 5 per cent of their assets in freely traded and non-tradeable shares of listed companies and convertible bonds.

Buying cheaper non-tradeable shares will appeal to insurers, whose investment options remain restricted, and provide another means for the government to sell its holdings in listed firms, after an attempt to liquidate these on the stock market in 2001 ended disastrously after triggering a steep fall in share prices.

The new direct investment quota would be in addition to the 15 per cent of assets insurers can already invest in mainland mutual funds, a Shanghai-based life insurance company executive close to the talks said yesterday.

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Based on industry estimates, up to 50 billion yuan could be funnelled into mainland equities because of the change, the China Securities Journal reported yesterday.

'This would be a welcome move to broaden insurers' investment options,' said Gui Haoming, an analyst at Shanghai-based Shenyin & Wanguo Securities. 'It follows the State Council's recent guidance to channel more insurance assets into the stock market.'

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