The Japanese firm plans to join the China-Japan ETF Connect programme on top of having a QDLP business in China.

The Japanese firm plans to join the China-Japan ETF Connect programme on top of having a QDLP business in China.
The Singapore-headquartered firm is looking at adding more investment staff and obtaining a QDLP licence.
It seems that barring a sudden policy reversal by local regulators, JPMAM will soon become the first foreign firm to own a majority stake in a China asset manager.
Hefeng Family Office is now able to conduct advisory and asset management activities in Hong Kong.
Investors should consider the interaction between water, energy and food as a guide to future costly environmental regulation, according to T Rowe Price.
A perfect storm of a US-China tariff deal, renminbi appreciation, investment inflows and domestic reforms will drive Chinese bond prices higher, according to co-manager of the Invesco Asian Bond Fund.
Also in April, China issued additional outbound quotas to five domestic firms after nearly a year of non-issuance.
Concerns about trade tariffs and IP rights in China should not put off foreign investors, according to a regional family office consultant.
The China bond inclusion will bring in investors, though most will aim for low or close to zero credit risk bonds, according to Edmund Goh, Asian fixed income manager at Aberdeen Standard Investments.
The firm also claims that its pure discretionary business in Asia is higher than the average in the region, according to Claude Haberer, equity partner and CEO for Asia-Pacific.
Part of the Mark Allen Group.