It's time to consider legalizing the private equity (PE) fund in
China, a legislative official suggested on Friday, noting that this
would help bolster the development of the VC (venture capital)
industry in China.
"People's knowledge on PE fund has been widened over the past
decade and the environment to run PE fund in China is getting
mature," said Cheng Siwei, vice chairman of the Standing Committee
of the National People's Congress (NPC), China's legislative body.
He made a keynote speech at the opening ceremony of the eighth
China Venture Capital Forum, an annual event that has attracted
more than 1,000 venture capitalists, entrepreneurs and government
officials.
Cheng, who was dubbed as China's "father of venture capital,"
said he has chaired a close-door seminar focusing on the PE fund
recently, which was attended by the reform commission officials,
financial professionals and scholars.
While keeping the details under wraps, Cheng said he was quite
positive on the issue. "I think firstly it should be a regulation,
then a law," he said.
However, the central government will make the final decision and
more research should be done, he added.
The PE funds, including industrial investment fund and venture
capital fund, had been taken into consideration when the
legislative body drafted China's fund law in 1999, according to
Cheng. However, they were not included in the law since the
legislators believed they were too risky.
"The absence of legal PE fund has undoubtedly hindered the
development of VC industry in China," Cheng said. Currently,
China's venture capital firms are only allowed to register in the
name of company but not funds, which means they do not have legal
status to raise funds from the public.
According to a recent survey, the total VC investment in China
increased, but the home-grown companies are getting weaker as a
whole. The forum organizer, China Venture Capital Institute,
conducted the annual survey in 24 provinces and municipalities,
including Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen, from October 2005 to
January.
The survey found that about 46.4 billion yuan (US$5.7 billion)
of a VC fund could be invested in the Chinese mainland at the end
of 2005, compared with 43.9 billion yuan (US$5.4 billion) in 2004
and 32.5 billion yuan (US$4 billion) in 2003.
However, the biggest part of the fund, nearly 34 percent, came
from overseas in 2005, a marked increase from 5 percent in
2003.
The Chinese firms, which accounted for 76 percent of the total
150 respondents, each managed 200 million yuan (US$24.7 million) of
the fund on average, or one third of that the foreign firms
managed.
(China Daily April 8, 2006)