Compliance
Compliance Corner: Wellington, China

The latest compliance news: regulatory developments, punishments, guidance, permissions and new product and service offerings.
Wellington Global Private Fund Management
(Shanghai)
Wellington Global Private Fund Management (Shanghai), a
subsidiary of Wellington
Management, can now offer investment products to accredited
investors in China, part of the continuing trend of foreign firms
trying to penetrate the Asian giant’s financial sector.
The organisation has won registration as a Qualified Domestic
Limited Partner private fund manager with the Asset Management
Association of China.
“As one of the world’s largest independent investment management
firms, we are keen to bring our leading research expertise and
overseas strategies to qualified investors here. China is a key
growth market worldwide, with long-term potential for the firm –
and is an integral part of our global and Asia strategy,” Scott
Geary, senior managing director and head of client group for
Asia-Pacific at Wellington Management, said.
Winning the licence is a progression for Wellington, which has
been serving institutional clients, including insurance
companies, asset management firms and private banks in mainland
China since 2007. Receiving a QDLP licence is a significant
step
“We are encouraged to see solid steps being continually taken by
Chinese regulators in promoting the country’s financial
opening-up. Such steps provide international financial
institutions like ours the opportunity to introduce our global
investment and research capabilities to onshore investors, and to
help meet their growing and varied financial goals,” Geary
added.
The move is a significant one because Wellington manages more
than $1.3 trillion of investments for a range of institutional
and private clients, including family offices.
At a time when relations between Western governments and Beijing
have cooled over issues such as trade and China’s security
crackdown on Hong Kong, the phenomenon of American and European
firms pushing into the market has been controversial. Last year,
famous hedge fund tycoon and political activist George Soros
warned that such firms were making a “tragic mistake.” The
financier said BlackRock's dealings in the Chinese economy will
not only lose money for its clients in the long run but will also
inflict damage on the national security of the US and other
democracies. Soros referred to moves by BlackRock, the world’s
largest asset manager, to
tap the onshore Chinese investment market.