Qualified foreign institutional investors (QFII) have turned out to be less 
speculative than other institutional investors in China, official figures 
show.
 
QFII tend to keep blue chip stocks they bought for much longer 
periods, and their investment style is relatively stable, the China Securities 
Regulatory Commission said. 
These investors have facilitated the stability of the Chinese stock markets, 
the commission said. 
By the end of July it had approved a total of 7.495 billion U.S. dollars 
worth of quota for 45 such investors, about three quarters of the planned total 
quota of 10 billion U.S. dollars. 
China introduced the QFII system four years ago, making it possible for 
overseas investors to invest in the country's capital market. 
In 2005, the change-hand rate of the stocks by QFII was 193 percent, much 
lower than that of investment funds, whose change-hand rate stood at 325 
percent, the commission said. 
Citing figures from stock exchanges, the commission said that last year the 
change-hand rate of stocks owned by social security funds was 218 percent, the 
rate of stocks owned by securities firms using capital they pooled from 
investors reached 520 percent, while the rate of stocks owned by securities 
firms using their own capital was 360 percent. 
China announced on Friday revised rules concerning qualified foreign 
institutional investors, in a bid to attract more non-speculative overseas 
investment for its stock markets. 
The new rules, made public by the China Securities Regulatory Commission, 
come into effect on Sept. 1, 2006. 
Slashing the QFII threshold, they make it possible for more overseas foreign 
institutional investors to qualify as investors in the Chinese A-share markets. 
The rules stipulate that minimum securities assets managed by a QFII 
applicant - such as fund management institutions, insurance companies and other 
institutions that stress long-term investment -- are 5 billion U.S. dollars for 
the current fiscal year, half the earlier QFII provisions.
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