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mainland Chinese investors

Coverage of mainland Chinese investors in the Nexus archive.

Earliest in view: Jun 1 · 06:46 UTCMost recent: Jun 25 · 02:00 UTC
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Recent coverage
  • BUSINESSJun 25 · 02:00 UTCSCMP WORLD
    Southbound Stock Connect flows surge to record US$152b driven by Hong Kong’s IPO revival

    Southbound Stock Connect flows reached a record US$152 billion in the past year as mainland Chinese investors purchased HK$1.19 trillion in Hong Kong-listed shares. The surge reflects strong confidence in Hong Kong’s market driven by a booming IPO pipeline, according to the SFC’s annual report.

  • BUSINESSJun 11 · 14:00 UTCSCMP CHINA
    China’s space start-ups eye IPO boom as SpaceX heads for record listing

    China's space start-ups are planning an IPO boom as SpaceX's record listing is expected to accelerate and reshape their IPO strategies. The development impacts mainland Chinese investors, the Hong Kong market, and capital flows.

  • BUSINESSJun 11 · 11:30 UTCSCMP CHINA
    Who pays when rockets explode? China insures SpaceX’s rivals in orbital race against US

    China insures SpaceX's rivals in the orbital race against the US. A 2016 SpaceX rocket explosion destroyed equipment, with Israel’s Space Communications holding an insurance policy. The article examines the global impact of SpaceX's IPO on Chinese investors and Hong Kong market dynamics.

  • BUSINESSJun 10 · 12:00 UTCSCMP WORLD
    Before Elon Musk’s SpaceX, these were the world’s 5 largest IPOs

    The upcoming SpaceX IPO, expected to raise $75 billion, is set to be a record-breaker, highlighting the growing influence of tech giants in global capital markets. The IPO's impact is reshaping mainland Chinese investors' strategies and the Hong Kong market.

  • BUSINESSJun 1 · 06:46 UTCCHINA DIGITAL TIMES
    Netizen Voices: “Money Can’t Get Out, and Neither Can People”

    Chinese regulators have restricted cross-border brokerage apps like Futu, Tiger Brokers, and Long Bridge, prohibiting mainland investors from accessing overseas stocks without licenses. The policy, criticized online as limiting both capital and people's mobility, could impact up to HK$250 billion in assets held by mainland investors in Hong Kong. Hong Kong banks now require mainland clients to declare funds originate overseas, tightening capital controls.

mainland Chinese investors · Dossier · The Nexus