China’s Growing Curbs on Offshore Investments Worry Global Bankers

China’s Growing Curbs on Offshore Investments Worry Global Bankers
An investor watches a board showing stock information at a brokerage office in Beijing on Oct. 8, 2018. Jason Lee/Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

HONG KONG/SHANGHAI—News of a foreign wealth manager being denied exit from China last week is raising concerns among global private banks, as they seek to tap trillions of dollars of wealth offshore in the face of Beijing’s growing curbs on overseas investments and outflows.

The unidentified banker, a Singapore-based member of UBS’s wealth-management business, was blocked from leaving Beijing and was asked to meet with local officials this week.

Although the purpose of the meeting isn’t publicly known, the news still led several banks, including UBS, Citigroup, JPMorgan, Standard Chartered, and BNP Paribas, to ask their private bankers to reconsider travel to China, people familiar with the matter said on Oct. 22.

The Swiss bank on Oct. 23 rescinded its travel guidance and said in a statement it was business as usual in China. A UBS spokesman in Hong Kong declined to offer any further comment when contacted by Reuters on Oct. 24.

The uncertainty around the UBS banker’s delayed departure comes at a tricky time for foreign investors in China, as Beijing steps up curbs and increases scrutiny on offshore investments and outflows amid a weakening economy and currency.

And as authorities continue a sweeping campaign to root out graft, some bankers are beginning to get nervous about pursuing arguably one of the biggest opportunity worldwide in the wealth management business.

The UBS snag could prompt clients, as well as their offshore advisers, to be more cautious in making new investments, four senior private banking sources said.

“The immediate impact will be that everyone will be on pause for some time and try to figure out what all these means for China offshore wealth management business,” a wealth-management executive at a large European bank said.

“All the firms have their rules of engagement with clients when you are handling offshore wealth. The question is if those rules need to be revisited and you have to reinforce that,” he said, while declining to be identified, due to the sensitivity of the matter.

UBS is the largest wealth manager operating in Asia, with $383 billion of assets under management, according to Asian Private Banker magazine, ahead of Citi, Credit Suisse, HSBC and Julius Baer.

Foreign private banks have invested heavily in courting the rich in China—home to the world’s fastest-growing pool of wealth and the second-largest group of billionaires in the world, after the United States.

Regulations and restrictions on business ownership and products have so far deterred most banks from having an onshore presence. An offshore business, mainly managed out of their Hong Kong and Singapore hubs, remains the preferred route.

Offshore Push

While offshore wealth managers often make “social visits” to clients in their home countries, most nations including China don’t allow them to solicit business or sell overseas investment instruments in the onshore market.

The number of rich—those with at least $1 million to invest—rose by 12 percent last year in Asia-Pacific, led by China. The rate of growth was the fastest in the world, according to consultant Capgemini.

The investible assets of rich in China are estimated to have reached $8.4 trillion last year, and Capgemini says 45.5 percent of the onshore wealth was held outside the home market as of the second quarter of last year.

A high degree of secrecy means there are no credible data on the total assets that Chinese individuals hold offshore.

Offshore private banks are at liberty to help clients— including those from China—manage wealth already outside the mainland via legal means, such as through company stock listings, asset sales or the creation of trust companies.

But UBS’s recent hiccup comes as bankers and lawyers expect China to get more stringent about the offshoring of wealth. They fear further curbs as Beijing grapples with a weaker currency, and gets access to taxpayer data by sharing financial information with other countries.

Authorities now “may be gradually increasing supervision of offshore assets,” said Song Xu, a partner at Shanghai office of law firm Zhong Yin.

The yuan has fallen more than 6 percent this year, hit by a Sino-U.S. trade dispute; China has been unobtrusively moving to rein in currency outflows.

Moreover, under new global standards aimed at cracking down on tax cheats, China this year began a two-way exchange of information about bank accounts with other nations, which consultants say will give the authorities more visibility about the offshore holdings of its citizens.

“Capital-control measures in China are getting tighter, not looser. And the ongoing crackdown on corruption and deleveraging has also created new barriers for offshore wealth management,” said a Beijing-based boutique wealth manager.

“While Chinese clients are still very keen to diversify their assets, there will be a lot more caution on all sides.”

By Sumeet Chatterjee & Engen Tham