Compliance
Schroders' China Joint Venture Gets Regulatory Green Light

Western firms, sometimes using the avenue of joint ventures, continue to push into mainland China markets, whatever misgivings some prominent investors and commentators may have.
Schroder BOCOM Wealth Management Co, a partnership in China
between UK-listed Schroders and
Bank of Communications Wealth Management, has received a
regulatory green light to start business.
Approval was granted yesterday by the China Banking and Insurance
Regulatory Commission. The entity became the third sino-foreign
joint venture wealth management company approved for business
commencement, Schroders said in a statement.
The JV has RMB1 billion of registered capital and is registered
in Shanghai. Schroder Investment Management Limited holds a 51
per cent stake in Schroder BOCOM Wealth Management, whilst Bank
of Communications Wealth Management Co, Ltd. holds 49 per cent of
shares.
Such joint ventures have continued to flourish as Western firms
seek to develop new markets while China is trying to draw in
foreign sources of capital. BlackRock and a host of other firms
have set up operations to tap mainland China business – although
not always without controversy. China’s crackdown last year on
certain technology and other business sectors prompted famed
hedge fund investor and political activist
George Soros to warn that such firms were making a “tragic
mistake.”
See an example here of Credit Suisse's mainland China venture. In November 2021, Pictet Asset Management, part of Switzerland’s Pictet, opened a wholly foreign-owned enterprise in Shanghai.
Mainland China, Hong Kong and Macao launched the Wealth Connect regulatory system last year which is designed to bind the jurisdictions' wealth markets together more closely.