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Published: 10:01, October 18, 2021 | Updated: 14:03, October 18, 2021
Hong Kong edges in Singapore's China stock futures monopoly
By Bloomberg
Published:10:01, October 18, 2021 Updated:14:03, October 18, 2021 By Bloomberg

Pedestrians walk past the Exchange Square complex, which houses the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, in Hong Kong, March 23, 2021. (PAUL YEUNG / BLOOMBERG)

Hong Kong is starting futures contracts that make it easier for international investors to bet on Chinese mainland stocks, intensifying rivalry between the city’s bourse and its Singapore counterpart.

Analysts expect that the new product, which launches Monday, from Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing Ltd could take several years to gain traction, but that it will ultimately provide formidable competition to the offering available from Singapore Exchange Ltd.

While Singapore provides investors better liquidity, fewer holidays and a mature offshore derivatives ecosystem, Hong Kong has a stock trading link with Chinese mainland and the underlying index the contracts will use has more balanced sector weightings, they said.

With huge global demand for exposure to China’s US$12 trillion onshore equities market, there is increasing interest in the futures contracts to hedge risks.

READ MORE: A-share futures to cement HKEX Asian derivatives hub role

There will be limited earnings boost for the Hong Kong bourse in the near term, and greater earnings downside risk for SGX, Citigroup Inc analysts Yafei Tian wrote in a note earlier this week, adding the former looks better positioned in A-share derivatives in the longer term.

HKEX A50 futures will become the biggest offshore traded A-share equity futures product over the medium term.

Analysts, Goldman Sachs Group Inc 

SGX shares slumped more than 4 percent on Aug 23 after Hong Kong announced that it would launch the futures built on an MSCI Inc measure that gives access to 50 mainland stocks. HKEX soared almost 6 percent that day.

“HKEX A50 futures will become the biggest offshore traded A-share equity futures product over the medium term,” Goldman Sachs Group Inc analysts wrote in a report late in September. They added that while trading volume for MSCI index-based futures is typically “negligible” for the first two years, the new product may add about 5 percent to HKEX’s revenues by 2025.

Singapore’s A50 futures product, which tracks FTSE China A50 Index, was launched in 2006 and had no direct competition until now. The futures accounted for about 10 percent of SGX’s total revenues and 29 percent of derivatives revenue in the 2021 fiscal year ended June, according to Citigroup research.

With more customer demand for access to onshore China, FTSE Russell this week concluded a market consultation on potentially doubling the number of members of its China A50 Index to the 100 largest stocks by market capitalization.

The Singapore bourse has built its derivatives product on this gauge and an expansion of the index could pave the way for it to increase exposure to the market, Michael Syn, SGX’s head of equities, said in an interview.

ALSO READ: HKEx popular for mainland stocks seeking secondary listings

The turnover of China’s derivatives market versus cash equities is “still very, very low” and the offshore futures market compared to onshore is much smaller, leaving room for growth, he added. Bloomberg Intelligence estimates that the futures could contribute 13 percent to SGX’s revenue by 2023 if overall offshore A-shares derivatives revenues grow by 22 percent compounded annually.

TRADING COSTS

Singapore’s exchange doesn’t “shut down when a typhoon hits” and the design of the underlying index for the contracts is efficient and leads to low fees, SGX’s Syn said. 

Trading costs could be a concern with the MSCI China A 50 Connect Index, which tracks some of the biggest mainland stocks from each sector, as the gauge uses several measures to balance out industry weighting. In comparison, the FTSE measure includes the largest onshore shares weighted by market cap.

In this Feb 17, 2021 photo, a person uses the escalator at the Singapore Exchange Ltd (SGX) headquarters in Singapore. (LAURYN ISHAK / BLOOMBERG)

The MSCI index has a “big drawback” of higher index turnover, which could result in higher trading costs, said Brian Freitas, an analyst who provides research via the Smartkarma platform, in a note on Thursday.

For the HKEX, the new futures contract offers a much more cost-effective alternative to existing China A-share hedging solutions, such as swaps and other listed A-share index derivatives, a spokesperson at the bourse said in an email, adding that the exchange “looks forward to continuing to develop Hong Kong’s leading position as Asia’s derivatives hub.”

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