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China is loosening its grip on the use of foreign exchange to
encourage domestic firms to make overseas investment, as the
country sought to diversify the use of its huge forex reserves.
The State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE), the
country's forex regulator, said Tuesday in an online notice that it
would allow all kinds of firms in China to invest their forex
earnings in overseas branches.
Previously, only large domestic or foreign multinationals are
allowed to do so. The other firms are required to submit their
forex earnings to the government in exchange for the local
currency, contributing to the huge pool of the country's forex
reserves.
The SAFE said in the same notice that it would allow firms to
use self-owned forex and forex purchased with the yuan, expanding
the source of forex that firms could use to invest in their
overseas subsidiaries.
The administration sets a quota on such forex uses, which is no
more than 30 percent of the firm's equity.
Firms still need approvals from the SAFE to use forex in
overseas investment, but the administration said it would simplify
approval and forex remittance procedures to facilitate such
practices.
The SAFE said the relaxed control was aimed to solve the
financing difficulties of Chinese firms when they expand overseas,
and such support for overseas expansion was meant to boost
exports.
China's forex reserves stood at 1.9537 trillion U.S. dollars by
the end of March, the largest in the world. To play it safe,
China's huge reserves have usually been invested in low-risk but
low-yield assets, such as U.S. government bonds.
(Xinhua News Agency June 10, 2009)
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