Title: A Tale of Two Cities
1A Tale of Two CitiesShanghai Hong KongAs
INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL CENTRES
By Yim, Hosea Zhang, Herbert
2Shanghais successful bid for the 2010 World Expo
Hong Kongs failure to get host of 2006 Asian
Games
Shanghai announced in April 1990 its plan to
develop the Pudong New Area, and its ambition to
re-emerge as a major international financial,
commercial and shipping centre by the first
decade of 21 Century. Since Hong Kong was
handed back to China in 1997, it has suffered
something of an identity crisis. Apparently,
Hong Kong was in a dither.
VS
3Shanghai
Financial Lujiazui Financial District in Pudong
New Area In 2005 the State Council reaffirmed
the positioning of the 31.78 km² Lujiazui area,
as the only finance and trade zone among the 185
state-level development zones in mainland China.
Shanghais GDP of Finance More than 10 of
total, March 2009 Growth Rate 26 Commercial
Shanghai's commercial sector saw rapid growth in
2007, with total commodity sales amounting to
Rmb2,040.1 billion, an increase of 31.6 over
2006. Wholesale sales showed a year-on-year
growth of 35.8 while retail sales were up by
14.5. Shipping Yangshan deep-water port The
third phase will be completed by 2010 with seven
berths, When fully completed in 2012, the port
will have four phases in operation with 30 berths
capable of handling 15 million Twenty Equivalent
Units annually (Largest in the world) US 12
Billion
4Typologies of Financial Centre
Teleological Perspective
Geographical Perspective
Historical Perspective
Functional Center
Paper Center
National or Domestic Centre
International Centre
Offshore Banking Centre
Traditional Centre
Financial Entrepôt
Integrated Centre
Segregated Centre
Hong Kong Shanghai
5Typologies of Financial Centre
- Paper Center
- A location for recording financial transactions
only, but little or no actual banking or
financial business is carried out there. Many
transnational financial institutions find it
convenient, for example, to keep shell offices
in jurisdictions where taxes and prudential
regulations are nonexistent or nominal, in order
to minimize their overall costs. - Integrated Centre
- Refers to one in which no artificial barriers
exist between onshore and offshore markets, so
that once a financial institution is established,
it can engage in both onshore and offshore
business, whether denominated in home or foreign
currencies, without restriction. - Segregated Centre
- One in which the authorities make clear
distinctions between onshore and offshore
markets, or between domestic- currency-denominated
and foreign-currency-denominated businesses. A
segregated centre is more often called an
offshore financial centre (OFC). The term
offshore banking centre is also used, implying
that only the banking sector is
internationalized. - Financial Entrepôt.
- It is defined as a centre that offers the
services of its domestic financial institutions,
money markets, and securities markets to both
domestic and foreign residents.
6Typologies of Financial Centre
- What Makes an IFC?
- What are the significant characteristics, in
quantitative terms, of an IFC? - What are the necessary conditions, or
prerequisites, for a city to become a genuine
IFC?
7Shanghai and Hong Kong Macroeconomic and
Financial Center Profiles
-
Shanghai Hong Kong - Population
13,270,000 6,759,500 - GDP (RMB billion)(2009) 1,490
1,433 - GDP per capita (ratio) 2009 1
2.7 - 2001
1 5 - Average annual real GDP growth 8.2
-2.7 - 2009
- Exports of Goods Service 141.91
457.6 (including Transshipment) - Average annual growth rate 20.6
8.0 - (last decade of 20 Century)
- Imports of Goods Services 135.82
434.21 - Average annual growth rate 17.8
8.5 - (last decade of 20 Century)
8Shanghai and Hong Kong Macroeconomic and
Financial Center Profiles
- Banking Sector
-
Shanghai Hong Kong - Deposits (US billion)
135.8 436.73 - Foreign currency deposits (US billion)
18.92 198.96 - Loans (US billion)
103.2 280.13 - Foreign currency loans (US billion)
12.87 68.88 - Loans Abroad (US billion)
n.a. 39.69 - Balances due to banks abroad (US billion) n.a.
187.03 - Balances due from banks abroad (US billion) n.a.
276.87 - Clearing House daily turnover (US billion)
n.a. 45.15 - Interbank market daily turnover (US billion)
23.44 26.42
9Shanghai and Hong Kong Macroeconomic and
Financial Center Profiles
- No. of banks and depository institutions
Shanghai Hong Kong - Domestic
18 46 - Foreign
53 204 - Insurance
- No. of insurance companies
- Domestic
18 100 - Foreign
14 106 - Premium income (US billion)
2.2 2.5 - Registered intermediaries
n.a. 33,187 - Fund Management
- No. of unit trusts or mutual funds
- Domestic
23 90 - Foreign
n.a. 1,800
10Historical Overview Shanghai
- Modern Western-style banking and finance was
introduced into the two cities at approximately
the same time after the end of the First Opium
War ???? - 1936, 47 foreign banks
- Head Offices in Shanghai. Chinese Banks Yearbook,
in 1936, of the 164 domestic banks in China, 6
government owned banks. - 72 traditional Qianzhuang, 40 national deposit
- Shanghai was also the place where modern
financial markets were concentrated - Insurance Center 166 foreign insurance companies
and 48 domestic insurance companies
11Historical Overview Shanghai
- Shanghai at that time was not only the largest
financial centre inside China, but was also an
international financial centre in the Far East. - Economics historians Hong and Zhang
- Japans aggression against China was the
immediate and most important cause of Shanghais
decline as a financial centre.
Bund, Shanghai
12Historical Overview Hong Kong
- 1941- 45 when Japan occupied H.K.
- After WWII, H.K. enjoyed prolong peace
- 1966 after banking crisis
- Late 60s
- Mid 1970s ready to issue new bank licences
- 1982 take off interest withholding tax on foreign
currency - 1989 abolish all form of tax on interest
Victoria Harbor 1946
13Strength and Weakness
- H.K.s Number of regional headquarters and
regional offices are much greater than Shanghais
14Strength and Weakness
- Shanghai does not have full capital mobility
since there are extensive controls over capital
movement in China - Also RMB is not full convertible, it would take
some time to do so - On the other hand, H.K. has long history of full
convertibility and capital mobility
15Strength and Weakness
- The banking system is crippled by non-performing
loans (NPL) - Official figures about 24 and in the private
sector is more then 40 - In economic advance regions such as Shanghai,
Jiangsu, and Zhejiang provinces had avg. of
712 - Basel Accord require minimum of 8 capital
adequacy ratio (CAR)
16Strength and Weakness
- Compared to Hong Kong who have CAR of 16 which
is one of the highest in the world - A NPL ratio of 5.05, which is much lower default
loans compare to Shanghai.
17Strength and Weakness
- Free flow of information still remains a problem
in Shanghai. Central Government censors sensitive
political and social news still exist. After all
the Central Government own all mass media in
China - Hong Kong has much higher free flow of
information since media are privately owned.
18Strength and Weakness
- Main issue in Hong Kong is the growth rate trend.
- It drop from 9 to 2 from 1960 to 2008
- Shanghai's GDP for 2008 hit a 16-year low at 9.7
percent year-on-year
Hong Kong Annual GDP Growth Rate 1960-2008, World
Bank Group
19Strength and Weakness
- Shanghai have a much larger bond and commodity
market. - Its national financial center is unchallenged.
- They monopolized the foreign exchange market and
interbank market - 2009 1 of China population accounted for 9.1
of total bank deposit - Thus making Shanghai a huge magnet for FDI and
domestic direct investment - 10 of China's contracted FDI, 13 of China's
Imports
20Strength and Weakness
- Have well-diversified industrial structure
- Larger science and technology talents
- RD also much better compared to H.K.
- 2001 Shanghai science and tech score was 3.294
compared to H.K.s 3.226 - Experiencing much higher GDP and foreign trade
growth. - Catches up/ supass Hong Kong in no time.
21Conclusion
- 2008 Shanghai Municipal Government promulgate
some policies to encourage MNCs to establish RHQs - They provide incentives such ass cash allowance
and awards, financing management support,
simplified entry-exit formalities for staff, and
customs clearance - In 2008 Shanghai has 626 headquarter-type
foreign-invested enterprises have been approved
22Conclusion
- In 2009 introduced new policy to encourage
private equity / venture capital in Pudong. - PE/VC that establish since 2008 have paid-up
registered capital of RMB500 million will grant a
lump sum of RMB5 million. - Partnership PE/VC that raised funds reach RMB1
Billion will grant RMB5 million - Up to 40 tax rebate, senior management may also
entitle house allowance up to RMB200,000 / person
23Conclusion
- 2007 Chinas capital controls remain
substantially binding. Thus, China does not have
full capital mobility yet. - Full convertibility of RMB is not achieve yet.
24Conclusion
- In 2010 Shanghais CAR is reach up to 10.16,
which is well above 8 minimum requirement by
Basel Accord. - China also require banks to maintain CAR of at
least 10 up from 8 and Shanghai Pudong
Development Bank to keep their core CAR at 7
from 4.