Money can't buy happiness but it can certainly rent it for a couple of hours. Your position:Home->china news-> Individual Overseas Investment Expected to Expand The Chinese government will loosen limits on individual investment abroad this year, according to Li Dongrong, vice director of the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE). The government would further broaden channels for investment overseas, Li said at a meeting on the country's capital investment plan for 2007, the Shanghai Security Journal reported on Monday. The report quoted analysts as saying the move indicated a major breakthrough in allowing Chinese individuals to buy overseas financial assets. Currently, Chinese individuals can only buy investment products provided by banks and fund management companies if they want to invest abroad under a Qualified Domestic Institutional Investor (QDII) scheme. The SAFE granted 15 banks overseas investment quotas totaling US$13.4 billion in 2006. Meanwhile, 15 insurance companies were granted overseas investment quotas of US$5.17 billion and one fund management company was given a quota of US$500 million. The meeting also heard that the government would also increase the number of QDIIs and the value of their investment quotas, but no details of quotas were available. At the end of 2006, Short-term foreign debt makes up as much as 57 percent of total foreign debt, far higher than the international warning level of 25 percent. The government is preparing to establish a state forex investment company to improve management of (Xinhua News Agency March 20, 2007)
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