BMO, Jupiter and Schroders rolling out Hong Kong funds

BMO Global is launching an actively-managed fund in Hong Kong that invests in passive products, while Jupiter and Schroders have received regulatory approval to launch their own offerings.

Vanguard to unveil first China ETF in Hong Kong

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BMO Global received a green light at the end of May to offer its BMO Balanced Fund to investors, according to records from Hong Kong’s Securities and Futures Commission (SFC).

It is the Canadian firm’s first actively-managed fund domiciled in Hong Kong.

It will invest primarily in global ETFs, which may or may not be authorised by the SFC, according to the fund’s key fact statement.

Around 40%-80% of the fund will be in equity ETFs and 20%-60% in fixed income ETFs.

BMO initially launched three ETFs in 2014 and rolled out another batch of four in 2016:

Source: Hong Kong Exchange. In US dollars.

Chinese opportunities

At the end of 2017, the firm was the seventh largest ETF manager in Hong Kong, according to data from Broadridge Financial.

BMO has chosen Hong Kong as the place to focus its Asian expansion efforts, Mark Raes, Toronto-based head of product at BMO Exchange Traded Funds, told our sister publication Fund Selector Asia in October last year.

One of the reasons is the potential opportunity to sell its products to mainland Chinese investors through the China-Hong Kong ETF Connect scheme, which is expected to roll out as early as the end of this year.

The firm previously announced plans to move into the fund-of-funds space in China by embedding its ETF products into funds managed by its strategic partner, ICBC.

A unit of BMO also has a 28% stake in a joint venture with mainland asset manager Fullgoal Fund Management.

Globally, BMO manages $260bn in assets and has offices in Chicago, Toronto, London and Hong Kong, according to the firm.

Jupiter and Schroders

Other firms that are expected to launch products soon include Jupiter Asset Management and Schroders.

Jupiter’s Global Emerging Markets Short Duration Bond Fund received a go signal from the SFC this month, while the Schroder Global Target Return Fund received regulatory approval in June.

The Jupiter fund was made available to accredited investors in Singapore in May this year, while the Schroders fund has been available to both retail and accredited investors in the Lion city since 2016, according to data from FE Analytics.

For more insight on asset and wealth management in Asia, please visit www.fundselectorasia.com

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