According to recent media reports, an estimated 300 billion yuan
of overseas hot money is now operating in China, citing a report
that tracks the flow of this capital after it enters the country.
The reports also said that a considerable proportion of the capital
is now diverted from the stock market to the property market and
Guangzhou, Shenzhen, and Shanghai attract the bulk of this
transferred capital.
Yesterday, Li Youhuan, a researcher from the Guangdong Academy
of Social Sciences who participated in the investigation report,
made a clarification, saying the estimated total amount of hot
money operating in China is US$250 to 300 billion, not yuan.
He also explained that the transfer from stocks to property is
seen in many cities like Beijing, Tianjin, Shanghai, and Guangzhou
and it is hard to judge which cities are their major targets.
Li's team, entrusted by government departments, began to track
the flow of overseas hot money last October and their findings are
based on individual case studies and questionnaires with
underground banks.
Their investigation found that, beginning this year, some hot
money is being diverted from the stock market to the property
market, a practice confirmed by some real estate firms.
May 30 marks a clear division for the change. On that day,
Chinese shares closed sharply lower, with the benchmark Shanghai
Composite Index down 6.5 percent, from the previous close, after
the Ministry of Finance announced that it would raise the stamp tax
on securities trading from the previous 0.1 percent to 0.3 percent
beginning May 30.
Before May 30, most of the hot money was invested in the bullish
stock market; after the tax adjustment, most speculators withdrew
their money from the risky stock market and invested it in the
relatively stable property market.
However, the exact amount of money that was diverted is
difficult to calculate and it is also difficult to judge how much
hot money is invested in the stock market and how much in the
property market.
The major reason for the transfer is that the Chinese stock
market is affected too greatly by policy and is not a good way to
rapidly increase capital value, the investigation revealed.
According to Li, the majorĀ form for hot money speculation
in the property market is housing purchases through mortgage loans
and then hogging up the prices through reselling. Li's team found
an individual case where over 100 housing units were bought at the
same time. Some speculators choose to set up companies for such a
large purchase.
Zhao Zhuowen, general manager of TCZY Consultants, said there is
a tendency for hot money to enter the Guangzhou property market but
it has yet to occur on a large scale. They mainly target high-end
properties, instead of middle and low-end residential buildings.
However, as hot money is short-term and speculative in nature, they
will still help lift prices of residential buildings although not
in a direct way.
Zhao pointed out that Guangzhou's housing market does not have
the necessary restrictions, from land sale to housing purchase. He
explained that the city needs a comprehensive restriction system to
fend off the influx of hot money.
In addition to the housing market, overseas capital is showing
growing interest in original issue stock, securities
issued when a company is first incorporated, Li's
investigation found.
"They will buy a large amount of original issue stock from
companies that have listing plans and their shares will greatly
increase in value when listed, often by a large margin. They are
especially interested in original issue stock by state-owned
enterprises," according to Li.
Purchase of original issue stock of listed companies carries a
lot of profit as well as great risks. Once the listing plans are
grounded, it will deal a heavy blow to those who have bought the
original shares, Li said.
(China.org.cn by Yuan Fang, September 14, 2007)