Japanese securities trader Nomura plans to set up holding firm in China

Xinhua
Japan's largest securities trader Nomura has become the first foreign player to plan the setting up of a holding firm in China.
Xinhua
Japanese securities trader Nomura plans to set up holding firm in China
Imaginechina

The Nomura sign is seen in Tokyo, Japan, on June 23, 2017.

Japan's largest securities trader Nomura has become the first foreign player to plan the setting up of a holding firm in China, after the country eased market access to the securities sector.

The company aims to hold 51 percent of the new firm's stakes and has submitted application materials to China's top securities watchdog, according to Gao Li, spokesperson with the China Securities Regulation Commission.

"The CSRC will review Nomura's application materials based on related laws and compliance regulations, and in an efficient manner," Gao said in a statement released on Tuesday.

Nomura also announced on Tuesday that it had appointed Lu Ting, former chief economist with Huatai Securities, to be its chief China economist.

The CSRC rolled out guidelines in late April allowing foreign investors to set up securities trading firms with holding status as part of China's opening-up efforts in the financial sector.

International investment bank UBS decided earlier this month to raise its stakes in the joint-venture China-based UBS Securities Co., which is the first foreign-invested fully licensed securities firm in China.


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