China's tightening of cross-border capital rules is hammering Hong Kong-exposed financial stocks, with Prudential and HSBC losing more than $8 billion in combined market value as investors price in a sharp slowdown in mainland Chinese fund flows into the territory.
China's State Council decree 837, effective July 1, tightens the process around outbound capital flows, adding requirements on filing, approvals and oversight. While the decree introduces no changes to quantitative limits on permitted flows, Hong Kong's Securities and Futures Commission has separately outlined additional rules requiring that prospective customers' funds originate outside of mainland China, according to a South China Morning Post report.
The rules are already biting. HSBC's Shanghai branch has warned clients that all funds deposited into investment accounts must comply with Hong Kong regulatory requirements, while Bank of East Asia's Shanghai branch has suspended opening Hong Kong accounts entirely, the report said.
"The new rules will create more friction for financial institutions in the region, but they aren't aimed at causing significant disruption to the system," said Philip Kett, an analyst at Jefferies. "There will be almost no impact on the life insurance industry."
Markets disagree. Prudential slid 7.6 percent in London to 974.8 pence, its lowest in eight months, extending losses to nearly 14 percent since the SFC's May 22 announcement. HSBC tumbled as much as 6 percent intraday in London before closing down 1.8 percent, while Standard Chartered shed 2.81 percent. In Hong Kong, AIA Group plunged 6.75 percent.
The selloff reflects concern that mainland Chinese visitors — a critical revenue source for Hong Kong's insurance and banking sectors — will face greater obstacles moving money into the territory. Prudential and AIA derive a significant portion of new business from mainland Chinese customers purchasing Hong Kong insurance policies, while HSBC and Standard Chartered earn substantial fees from cross-border wealth management.
JPMorgan analysts noted the decree has "generated meaningful noise around insurers with mainland Chinese visitor exposure, such as Prudential," though they added the rules are "likely to have little practical effect."
The regulatory crackdown comes as China intensifies scrutiny over capital outflows more broadly. Under separate rules announced last week, the Chinese government will have authority to conduct reviews of overseas investments that could affect national security.
For London-listed financial stocks, the timing compounds existing headwinds. The FTSE 100 edged up 0.3 percent to 10,360.32 on Thursday, supported by gains in Relx and London Stock Exchange Group, but the financial sector lagged. The pound held at $1.3436, while gold rose to $4,471.69 an ounce as investors sought havens.
The last time China imposed similar capital control measures in 2015-2016, Hong Kong insurance premiums from mainland visitors fell more than 30 percent over six months, according to Hong Kong Insurance Authority data. If history repeats, the current selloff may have further to run.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.