Standard Chartered becomes first foreign bank to custody public QDII, initiated funds in China

Standard Chartered Bank (China) announced on Thursday that it will provide custody services for a Hong Kong stock-initiated fund launched by Guotai Haitong Securities, becoming the first foreign bank in China to act as custodian for both a public Qualified Domestic Institutional Investor (QDII) fund and an initiated public fund. China's middle-income group, the world's largest and continuously expanding, is driving growing demand for wealth management services.

(ECNS) -- Standard Chartered Bank (China) said Thursday it will provide custody services for a Hong Kong stock-initiated fund launched by Guotai Haitong Securities, becoming the first foreign bank to act as custodian for both a public Qualified Domestic Institutional Investor (QDII) fund and an initiated public fund in China.

China has the world's largest and continuously expanding middle-income group, supporting growing demand for wealth management services. Statistics show that the net asset value of China's QDII funds exceeded 1 trillion yuan (about $140 billion) for the first time in January 2026, up more than 50% year-on-year.

Jean Lu, president of Standard Chartered China, said the vast growth potential of China's wealth management market presents broad opportunities for foreign financial institutions including Standard Chartered.

As the first foreign bank to obtain a securities investment fund custody license in China, the bank will continue providing high-value-added fund custody services to both domestic and international institutional clients.

(By Gong Weiwei)

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Illustration depicting Morgan Stanley's application for a crypto custody bank charter, blending Wall Street banking with digital assets.
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Morgan Stanley applies for national bank charter for crypto custody

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Morgan Stanley has filed for a national trust bank charter with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency to provide cryptocurrency custody services to institutional clients. The application, submitted on February 18, aims to position the Wall Street giant as a direct competitor to crypto-native custodians. This move reflects a broader trend of traditional banks expanding into digital assets amid a more favorable regulatory environment.

China's securities regulator chief Wu Qing pledged on Friday to advance capital market opening to a higher level and reform the STAR Market and ChiNext to better support technological innovation. Representatives from foreign financial institutions noted that since the 2024 nine-point guideline, China's capital market has significantly boosted its appeal to foreign investors. They suggested enhancing policy continuity and aligning with international standards.

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Citigroup plans to launch institutional bitcoin custody later this year, integrating it into traditional banking frameworks. Morgan Stanley has applied for a national trust charter to support crypto trading for its clients and is advancing spot trading on E*TRADE. These moves reflect growing institutional demand for digital assets within regulated systems.

Hong Kong's Financial Services Development Council (FSDC) recommends that the city pitch Southeast Asia and the Middle East for more global listings and issue long-term bonds to attract patient capital. New vice-chairman Rocky Tung Yat-ngok said Indonesia would be the first target market, given its large population and strong mining and Islamic finance sectors.

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Hong Kong’s West Kowloon Cultural District Authority has signed a HK$3 billion, 10-year loan facility agreement to address financing challenges until its residential property development generates income. The deal, with Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (Asia), or ICBC, is accompanied by a US$1 billion bond issuance in tranches. Board chairman Bernard Chan said it bridges a funding gap and signals the bank’s confidence in their future profitability.

HSBC has signalled its intent to engage with Hong Kong’s forthcoming stablecoin regime, as its CEO Georges Elhedery declined to confirm a licence application but noted ongoing discussions with regulators. This indicates the bank’s interest in the city’s digital innovation landscape. The move aligns with Hong Kong’s push to establish itself as a hub for digital asset trading.

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InvestHK director general Lau Hai-suen says Hong Kong should leverage its “safe haven for investment” status to attract foreign capital amid Middle East conflict, with firms using Dubai as a hub shifting to the city to diversify risk. The call comes as finance chief Paul Chan Mo-po continues a visit to Beijing.

 

 

 

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