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Exclusive | China’s sovereign fund sidelines executives amid worries over US scrutiny

China Investment Corporation has reassigned three department heads and delayed its 2024 report amid US pressure on foreign inflows

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China Investment Corporation, the country’s primary sovereign wealth fund, has reassigned three of its managing directors. Photo: Shutterstock
Frank Tangin Washington

China’s flagship sovereign wealth fund has moved three of its managing directors to new, subordinate roles, sources told the Post, with the heads of the fund’s fixed income, private equity and public relations departments all taking new non-managerial positions.

All have extensive overseas work experience, and none have reached the statutory retirement age. More reorganising could be on the horizon at China Investment Corporation (CIC), the sources said on condition of anonymity, including those managing the daily operations of US portfolios.

No reasons were given for the reshuffle, and the fund did not immediately reply to an emailed request for comment.

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China’s economic growth softens in October as property sector continues to drag investment

Official data points to uneven recovery last month, but analysts do not expect major stimulus as annual growth target within reach

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Photo shows advertisements for Singles’ Day online shopping sale in Beijing on November 11. Photo: Kyodo
Xinyi Wuin Beijing,Alice Liin Hong KongandCarol Yangin Beijing
New data showed fading growth momentum in China’s economy in October, underscoring persistent domestic pressures as investment cooled despite steady consumer spending and markets grappled with lingering uncertainties stemming from Beijing’s trade war with the US.

National fixed-asset investment fell by 1.7 per cent from January to October, a significant widening of the 0.5 per cent drop recorded in the first nine months and an even steeper decline than the 0.71 per cent decrease forecast by Chinese financial data provider Wind.

A National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) official partly attributed the fall to cautious investor sentiment and the slowdown in the property market, but expressed confidence that Beijing would achieve its annual growth target.

“The external environment is complex and challenging, while domestic competition is intense, and with declining investment returns, market participants have become more cautious in making investment decisions,” said Fu Linghui, spokesperson for the bureau, at a press conference for the data release on Friday.

“With weaker corporate profitability and the reduced appetite of private investors, overall investment growth slowed.”

He added that investment in real estate accounted for a 3 percentage point drag on overall investment, since the sector makes up a large share of the total.

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