<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=705389681562533&amp;ev=PageView&amp;noscript=1">
whatsappChat

Now! China - Regulation on Supervision and Administration of Private Investment Funds

According to statistics from the Asset Management Association of China (“AMAC”), as of the end of May 2024, there are 20,860 private fund managers in existence in China, managing 152,001 funds with a total scale of RMB 19.89 trillion. Among them, there are 8,240 private securities investment fund managers; 12,384 private equity and venture capital fund managers; 9 private asset allocation fund managers; and 227 other types of private investment fund managers.

The Regulation on Supervision and Administration of Private Investment Funds ("Regulations") was promulgated by the State Council of China on 3 July 2023 and came into effect on 1 September 2023. It is the first administrative regulation for the private investment fund industry in China, with legal force second only to the Securities Investment Funds Law of the People's Republic of China.

The Regulation consists of 7 chapters and 62 articles, aimed at:

01

Regulating the business activities of private fund.

 

02

Protecting the legitimate rights and interests of investors and related parties.

 

03

Promoting the standardised development of the private investment fund industry.

 

Interpretation of Key Points:

1. The object of the Regulation

Article 2: This Regulation shall apply to the investment activities within the territory of the People's Republic of China for the interests of investors by privately raising funds for the establishment of investment funds or the establishment of companies and partnerships pursuant to the law for the purpose of carrying out investment activities that are managed by privately investment fund managers or general partners.

The “private funds” regulated by the Regulations not only cover private securities investment funds, but also include private equity investment funds and venture capital funds.

2. Clarify the types of private fund managers and strengthen the norms for general partners

Article 7: A private investment fund manager shall be a legally established corporation or partnership. If the assets of a private investment fund established in the form of a partnership are managed by the general partner, the provisions of this Regulation concerning private investment fund managers shall apply to the general partner.

Article 7 specifies that the types of private fund managers only include companies and partnerships. Meanwhile, for partnership private funds, where the identity of the general partner ("GP") and the private fund manager materially overlaps, the GP shall apply the relevant provisions of the Private Fund manager in the Regulation. Therefore, for partnership private funds, if GP manages the fund assets without obtaining the registration and filing of the private fund manager, it will face the risk of verification and even administrative punishment in the future. In addition, the GP managing the assets of the private fund is required to perform the duties and obligations of the manager. The shareholders, actual controllers, partners and executives of the GP should also meet certain qualification requirements in accordance with the provisions, and there should be no corresponding prohibited behaviour.

3. In principle, private investment fund managers shall raise funds on their own

Article 17: A private investment fund manager shall raise funds on its own, and not entrust others to raise funds, unless otherwise provided by the securities regulator under the State Council.

We believe that this provision does not completely negate the consignment sale model. It should be understood as an encouragement for private funds to carry out direct sales while also allowing space for securities regulators to set rules on consignment sales. In the future, there may be relevant implementation rules that provide clear provisions on the consignment sale of private funds.

 

4. Prohibition on using private investment fund for lending business

Article 24: The investment activities of a private investment fund include the trading of shares of a joint stock company, equities of a limited liability company, bonds, fund shares, other securities and derivatives thereof, as well as other investment objects that comply with the regulations of the securities regulator under the State Council. The property of a private investment fund shall not be used for carrying out interbank lending or loan businesses or doing so in any disguised form. A private investment fund manager shall not increase the implicit government debt in a disguised form by requiring the local government to make a commitment to repurchase the principal or by any other means.

The Regulation specifically prohibits the private investment fund from being used as "debt disguised as equity", and further emphasises that the hidden debt of the government shall not be increased in disguise.

 

5. New nested exemption rules for parent funds

Article 25: The investment level of a private investment fund shall comply with the provisions of the financial regulator under the State Council. However, if a private investment fund meets the conditions prescribed by the securities regulator under the State Council and invests its main fund property in other private investment funds, it is not included at the investment level. The investment levels of venture capital funds and private investment funds specified in Paragraph 2 of Article 5 hereof shall be stipulated by the relevant departments under the State Council.

Article 25 of the Regulation clarifies that it should also comply with the provisions stipulated by the financial management department under the State Council on nesting. This means adhering to the requirements of the Guiding Opinions on two layers of nesting, which state that "asset management products can be reinvested in one layer of asset management products, but the invested asset management products shall not be reinvested in asset management products other than public securities investment funds." However, the Regulation also considers the practices of the private fund industry and provides an exemption for FOF (fund of funds) type private funds. These are private funds whose main fund assets are invested in other private funds and are not included in the investment level.

6. Establish an investment declaration, registration, review and disposal system for employees

Article 26: A private investment fund manager shall, under the principle of specialised management, hire senior executives with corresponding practice experience to take charge of investment management, risk control, compliance and other work. The private investment fund manager shall, under the principle of investor interests as priority, establish a management system for the declaration, registration, review and disposal of investments by practitioners, to prevent tunneling and conflict of interests.

Article 26 of the Regulation further requires the investment reporting system to cover the entire process of reporting, registration, review, disposal, etc., and that the scope of reporting is not limited to securities.

7. Management system for related parties’ transaction

Article 28: A private investment fund manager shall establish a sound affiliated transaction management system and shall not carry out improper transactions or tunneling with affiliated parties by using its private investment fund property or conceal relevant information through multi-level nesting or by other means.

Where a privately-offered fund manager utilises the privately-offered fund property to carry out transactions with itself, investors, other privately-offered funds managed by it, or privately-offered funds managed by other privately-offered fund managers controlled by its actual controller, or other entities with significant interest relationship, it shall perform the decision-making procedures agreed in the fund contract and provide the relevant information to the investors and privately-offered fund custodians in a timely manner.

8. Mandatory audit requirement

Article 29: A private investment fund manager shall, as required, engage an accounting firm to audit its privately offered fund property, provide investors with the audit results and submit the same to the registration and record-filing agency.

Article 29 of the Regulation stipulates the audit requirements for private funds but does not limit the conditions applicable to the audit, such as the type of fund, the size of assets, or the number of investors.

9. Foreign-invested private equity fund manager

Article 61: The administrative measures for foreign-funded private investment fund managers shall be formulated by the securities regulator under the State Council together with the relevant departments, in accordance with laws and administrative regulations on foreign investment and the provisions hereof. Unless otherwise stipulated by the State, an overseas entity shall not raise funds from domestic investors directly to establish a private investment fund. A private investment fund manager carrying out private investment fund business activities overseas shall comply with the relevant state provisions.

According to Article 61 of the Regulation, the securities regulatory commission and the relevant departments under the State Council will further clarify issues such as the qualifications of foreign-invested private fund managers, access procedures, and operation management. However, the formulation of specific management methods in the subsequent period must still adhere to the relevant provisions of the Foreign Investment Law and this Regulation, and must not conflict with the relevant provisions of the Regulation.

CHINA UPDATES

Accounting and Taxation

On 28 June 2024, the latest revised Accounting Law was passed and officially implemented from 1 July 2024. 
This revision maintains the current basic system and focuses on addressing key issues in accounting work, including:
  • Strengthening financial and accounting supervision to ensure the accuracy and reliability of accounting information.
  • Intensifying the punishment for accounting violations to help prevent and combat accounting fraud and other inappropriate behavior.
  • Improving the quality of accounting information, which is important for corporate decision-making, investor protection, and market transparency.

The main revisions are as follows:
  • Added provisions for utilising modern information methods to carry out accounting work.
  • Clarified the handling of accounting procedures and conducting of accounting-related work.
  • Added provisions to incorporate the internal accounting supervision system into the internal control management system.
  • Increased penalties for accounting violations.

Announcement on Increasing the Duty-Free Allowance for Residents Entering from Hong Kong and Macau
Announcement No. 7 of 2024 from the Ministry of Finance, General Administration of Customs, and State Administration of Taxation

In accordance with the amendments to the "Mainland and Hong Kong Closer Economic Partnership Arrangement" and the "Mainland and Macau Closer Economic Partnership Arrangement," the following measures regarding the increase in the duty-free allowance for residents entering from Hong Kong and Macau are announced:

  1. Increased Duty-Free Allowance: Residents aged 18 and above entering from Hong Kong and Macau who bring personal items obtained abroad with a total value not exceeding RMB 12,000, shall be released duty-free. Additionally, goods purchased at duty-free shops at entry points, with a combined total value (including personal items obtained abroad) not exceeding RMB 15,000, shall also be released duty-free.
  2. Entry Regulations for Hengqin Guangdong-Macao In-Depth Cooperation Zone: Luggage rules for residents entering Hengqin from Macau through the "first line" follows with existing regulations. For those entering the mainland from Hengqin through the "second line," the duty-free allowance will follow the measures mentioned above.
  3. Other Regulations: Other Existing regulations on luggage items for frequent travelers between Hong Kong and Macau remain unchanged.
  4. Implementation Dates: The new policy will be implemented from July 1 2024, at six entry points (Luohu, Futian, Shenzhen Bay, West Kowloon Station, Gongbei, and Zhuhai Highway Port). It will be extended to all entry points (excluding the "first line" at Hengqin) from 1 August 2024.

Human Resources

On 11 July 2024, the website of the Beijing Municipal Bureau of Human Resources and Social Security published the Notice on the Issuance of the Implementation Plan for Accelerating the Cultivation of Digital Talents in Beijing to Support the Development of the Digital Economy (2024-2026). 
The "Notice" outlines a total of 16 "hardcore" measures and plans to use approximately three years to focus on training four types of digital field talent teams. The goal is to increase the effective supply of digital talent and create a digital talent agglomeration effect, providing strong talent support for Beijing to become a global benchmark city for the digital economy.

Key points include:
  • Talent Introduction: Increase the recruitment of outstanding high-skilled talents who have significantly contributed to the development of Beijing's digital economy.
  • Talent Evaluation: Introduce new professional title evaluation majors in digital fields such as big data, cyberspace security, integrated circuits, and quantum information.
  • Talent Incentive: Guide enterprises in establishing and improving salary distribution systems that align with the characteristics of digital talents.
  • Talent Flow: Encourage the movement of digital talents into the regions of Beijing, Tianjin, and Hebei.

Corporate Governance

On 11 July 2024, The Chinese government released the  Reply of the State Council on Approving Temporary Adjustment of Several Administrative Regulations and Department Rules in Shenyang and Other Five Cities, which approves temporary adjustments to certain provisions of regulations, inclusive of the Special Management Measures for Foreign Investment Access (Negative List) (2021 Version), in six pilot cities: Shenyang, Nanjing, Hangzhou, Wuhan, Guangzhou, and Chengdu.

The Reply particularly stresses that the country will open virtual private network (VPN) services to foreign investors (with the foreign ownership not exceeding 50 percent) in five cities of Shenyang, Nanjing, Hangzhou, Guangzhou and Chengdu, to allow foreign telecom operators to set up joint ventures to provide VPN services for foreign-invested companies.

 
Contact Us
 
Tan Lee Lee
Head of China, China
 
Rita Boyle
Director, Business Advisory, International Desk

Yeo Lee Soon
China Business Advisory, Singapore
 

Related Insights

Now! China - Navigating Global Payroll: Best Practices and I...

Navigating China's Retail Landscape: Key Trends and Insights

Navigating internal control in China: Compliance, efficiency...

Restructuring foreign-invested enterprises in China

Statutory compliance requirements for upcoming annual CIT fi...

Optimising HR management for retailers and businesses with m...

Extension of preferential IIT policy for expatriates

The role of a supervisory board or supervisor in wholly fore...

Potential tax risks of transfer pricing year-end adjustment

Mitigating risks associated with seals

Environmental aspects affecting foreign investment in China

New value-added tax regime in China — Impact on representati...

TO SELL or TO BUY: Are you ready?

Employment in China

Risks and solutions to customs royalties

What foreign retailers should know about China’s regulations

Effect of bilateral investment treaties on foreign investmen...

A handy guide to doing business in China

Trends in a “digitally opportune” China

Establishing a foreign invested enterprise in China

Now! China - Navigating Global Payroll: Best Practices and I...

Navigating China's Retail Landscape: Key Trends and Insights

Navigating internal control in China: Compliance, efficiency...

Restructuring foreign-invested enterprises in China

Statutory compliance requirements for upcoming annual CIT fi...

Optimising HR management for retailers and businesses with m...

Extension of preferential IIT policy for expatriates

The role of a supervisory board or supervisor in wholly fore...

Potential tax risks of transfer pricing year-end adjustment

Mitigating risks associated with seals

Environmental aspects affecting foreign investment in China

New value-added tax regime in China — Impact on representati...

TO SELL or TO BUY: Are you ready?

Employment in China

Risks and solutions to customs royalties

What foreign retailers should know about China’s regulations

Effect of bilateral investment treaties on foreign investmen...

A handy guide to doing business in China

Trends in a “digitally opportune” China

Establishing a foreign invested enterprise in China