The US-China trade dispute continues to weigh on asset prices, but DWS’s CIO sees upside in parts of Asia, particularly China.

The US-China trade dispute continues to weigh on asset prices, but DWS’s CIO sees upside in parts of Asia, particularly China.
Separately, a number of players in Hong Kong’s ETF market have begun offering differentiated products.
One-fifth of EU companies operating in China said they were compelled to transfer technology to maintain access to the Chinese market in 2019.
The firm joins the likes of Fidelity and Value Partners, which have so far launched the most number of onshore private funds in the mainland.
Bank of Singapore (BOS) is scaling back exposure to risky assets because of the re-escalation of US-China trade tensions, said CIO Rajeev De Mello.
The new wealth management subsidiaries may provide business opportunities for foreign players that have a private fund management licence in China.
i-Fast’s China assets remain very small, but it intends to partner with more foreign players holding a private fund management (PFM) licence.
UBS Asset Management’s China-focused multi-asset product has reduced cash holdings since last year, but the manager remains neutral.
Investors in China should focus on domestic sectors relatively insulated from the tariff war and boosted by recent stimulus measures, says Robeco’s equities head.
Separately, the Chinese joint venture firm saw $14bn flow into its money market fund since it joined Ant Financial’s online wealth management platform last year.
Part of the Mark Allen Group.