Invesco has announced the launch of Europe’s first ETF providing investors with specific access to the ChiNext 50 Index, composed of the largest and most liquid companies in China’s technology and other innovative sectors. According to the asset manager, the Invesco ChiNext 50 UCITS ETF will replicate a capped version of the index to reduce concentration risk and ensure sufficient diversification.
Following this announcement, Gary Buxton, Head of EMEA ETFs at Invesco, highlighted one of the advantages of their global business model is having a strong local presence in the world’s major financial centers. “In collaboration with Invesco Great Wall, our joint venture investment management company in mainland China and a leading specialist in the Chinese market, we are pleased to announce, together with the Shenzhen Stock Exchange, the launch of a UCITS ETF linked to the ChiNext 50 Index. Our new ETF provides investors with unique access to China’s long-term growth potential, particularly given its focus on the innovation-driven transition to a new economy. As the ChiNext 50 Index celebrates its tenth anniversary in June, this ETF also marks a milestone in the index’s overseas expansion, accelerating the internationalization of Chinese A-shares,” Buxton added.
The asset manager believes that China is one of the fastest-growing markets in the world, with steady progress in key areas of economic growth, including technology. The country’s current five-year plan includes a goal to increase research and development (R&D) spending by at least 7% per year from 2021 to 2025, focusing on areas expected to yield high-value patents. For equity investors, increased R&D spending can be a significant driver of corporate earnings growth.
The ChiNext 50 Index reflects the performance of 50 of the largest and most liquid companies listed on the ChiNext market of the Shenzhen Stock Exchange. The capped index replicated by Invesco’s ETF comprises the same securities as the parent index but applies limits such that, at each quarterly rebalance, no individual security can have a weighting greater than 8%, and the aggregate weighting of securities with weightings above 4.5% cannot exceed 38%.
“While the index is not subject to explicit sector restrictions or requirements, investors can logically expect an overweight in technology, industry, and healthcare. The fund will invest in companies from rapidly growing innovative segments such as artificial intelligence, electric vehicles, renewable energy, robotics, automation, and biotechnology. Compared to broader Chinese indices, the average company in the ChiNext 50 Index has used more than double its operating income over the past six years for R&D financing to drive innovation,” highlighted Laure Peyranne, Head of ETFs Iberia, LatAm & US Offshore at Invesco.
The ETF will employ a replication method that aims to hold, as far as possible and feasible, all the securities in the index in their respective weightings but will use sampling techniques in circumstances where this is not reasonably possible.