ANALYSIS: Why has MSCI taken so long to embrace A-shares?

MSCI has finally included China A-shares in its emerging market indices, but the decision seems long overdue.

ANALYSIS: Why has MSCI taken so long to embrace A-shares?

|

The low level of investor confidence in China to date has been driven by concern over governance and structural issues at Chinese-listed companies.

That explains why it has taken MSCI four years and three failed attempts to finally allow A shares a tiny 0.73% share of the index.

China has upped its game in recent years, thanks largely to the success of the Hong Kong-Shenzhen and Hong Kong-Shanghai Stock Connect exchanges, which opened late last year and in 2014 respectively.

Remy Briand, managing director and chairman of the Index Policy Committee at MSCI, described these a “game changer” for the decision.

Jan Dehn, head of research at Ashmore Group believes negativity towards China is ill-founded because it has for many years had relatively stable growth and inflation rates, a firm commitment to reforms and very little political uncertainty.

He added: “We expect that index inclusion – which implies that investors will now have to take actual positions rather than just pontificate – will force commentators to abandon their often baseless pessimism and outright prejudice about China in favour of more mature, well-grounded views of the country and where it is heading.”

 

MORE ARTICLES ON