Close Menu
Fund Focus News
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Why HDFC Mutual Fund has restricted fresh lump sum investments in gold schemes should investors be worried?
    • Cheshire Premium Bonds winner scoops top prize of £1million
    • Rising SIP closures reflect industry maturity, not investor distress: Experts
    • Rs 10,000 monthly SIP vs Rs 10 lakh lump sum: Which can create a higher corpus in 10 years?
    • How much you REALLY need in Premium Bonds to win the £1m jackpot… and why it’s less than you may think. We reveal the truth behind all the rumours
    • High Return Value Mutual Funds in the Last 5 Years – Money Insights News
    • HSBC Mutual Fund launches RedHex Hybrid Long-Short Fund under SIF route; NFO closes June 16
    • Gold mutual fund investment limits India | More mutual funds curb gold bets amid restrictions on gold-focused schemes
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Fund Focus News
    • Home
    • Bonds
    • ETFs
    • Funds
    • Investments
    • Mutual Funds
    • Property Investments
    • SIP
    Fund Focus News
    Home»Funds»US investors push for special funds to avoid Chinese tech
    Funds

    US investors push for special funds to avoid Chinese tech

    March 1, 2026


    Stay informed with free updates

    Simply sign up to the Fund management myFT Digest — delivered directly to your inbox.

    US investors are increasingly asking Asian fund managers to carve out special vehicles so they can invest in the region without falling foul of American investment restrictions on Chinese technology.

    American investors held $361bn of Chinese stocks and bonds as recently as the end of 2024, according to the US Treasury, but rules introduced last year threaten large fines and imprisonment for those invested in certain high-tech Chinese sectors, such as advanced semiconductors, quantum computing and artificial intelligence.

    Several US states have also brought in laws to restrict their public pension funds from investing in Chinese companies.

    The restrictions are in response to a growing AI arms race between the US and China and concern within Washington that American investors are helping Beijing develop cutting-edge technologies.

    While asset managers have previously received interest in “ex-China” funds, private equity and hedge fund managers in Singapore and Hong Kong now report demand from US institutional investors for so-called parallel funds. These are replicas of existing funds that exclude certain Chinese sectors. In the past 12 months, an increasing number of asset managers were offering the workarounds in response to investor requests, they said.

    “US investors have become highly sensitive to China risk,” said Kher Sheng Lee, co-head of Asia-Pacific at the Alternative Investment Managers Association, which represents more than 2,000 hedge fund managers globally, with combined assets of over $4.5tn. “They still want the Asian growth story but now demand structures that limit spillover.”

    “Momentum is building,” he added. “Managers are repurposing familiar fund tools, like side pockets originally built for illiquidity, to manage geopolitical friction.”

    Side pockets are typically set up for clients who want to strip out harder-to-sell assets from a fund’s portfolio and increase their liquidity. Now US investors specify Chinese companies and sectors they want excluded.

    “These requests from US investors are coming up more and more often, especially for areas like semiconductors,” said a Singapore-based manager of a tech-focused fund. “They are looking to take out their exposure to the most sensitive companies.”

    Lee added: “The red lines are sharpening: advanced chips, AI and quantum are out. National security considerations are now a core investment filter.”

    Asset managers said the requests were driven by compliance staff at the US investors, which included pension funds, endowments and family offices, rather than the investment teams.

    “US regulation is the biggest driver of this,” said one Asia-based adviser who has worked on deals in which private equity firms have allowed US pension funds to exclude certain Chinese companies.

    “The most common solution has been for the manager to set up two separate funds,” the person added. “One that will have exposure to the entire regional strategy and another that will have exposure to the entire region but excluding the relevant country.”

    Under rules drawn up under former president Joe Biden, Washington in 2025 imposed civil and criminal penalties on US entities that invested in Chinese companies involved in semiconductors, quantum computing or AI systems that could be used by China’s military.

    The civil and criminal penalties include fines of up to $1mn and prison terms of up to 20 years.

    This led to many US investors cutting back or pausing new investments in China, while several Silicon Valley venture capital firms pre-emptively separated their Chinese entities before the rules came into effect.

    Recommended

    The Alibaba Quark AI app icon, featuring a circular blue and white design with Chinese text below, displayed on a smartphone screen.

    Since then, President Donald Trump has signed into law more significant powers to restrict US investments in Chinese technology companies, which has further led to investors seeking workarounds.

    Last year Minnesota’s State Board of Investment, which manages public retirement funds, said it had secured an opt-out from a Blackstone Asia fund from any investments in China, according to public documents, which said Blackstone had offered other investors the same option.

    Blackstone declined to comment on the matter or on how the deal was structured.

    The US state of Arkansas last year introduced a law to ban public pension funds from investing in Chinese companies, while states including Indiana, Florida, Kansas, Iowa, Tennessee and Arizona have passed legislation to restrict investment in specific Chinese sectors such as AI.



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

    Related Posts

    Emergency funds: How much to keep and where to park it? | Personal Finance

    June 5, 2026

    Top mid-cap index funds: 3 schemes with up to 17% SIP returns in 5 years – Mutual Funds News

    June 4, 2026

    The active funds beating the MSCI World for the past decade

    June 4, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    The Shifting Landscape of Art Investment and the Rise of Accessibility: The London Art Exchange

    September 11, 2023

    Charlie Cobham: The Art Broker Extraordinaire Maximizing Returns for High Net Worth Clients

    February 12, 2024

    Why HDFC Mutual Fund has restricted fresh lump sum investments in gold schemes should investors be worried?

    June 7, 2026

    The Unyielding Resilience of the Art Market: A Historical and Contemporary Perspective

    November 19, 2023
    Don't Miss
    Mutual Funds

    Why HDFC Mutual Fund has restricted fresh lump sum investments in gold schemes should investors be worried?

    June 7, 2026

    HDFC Mutual Fund has temporarily restricted fresh lump-sum investments in its HDFC Gold ETF and…

    Cheshire Premium Bonds winner scoops top prize of £1million

    June 7, 2026

    Rising SIP closures reflect industry maturity, not investor distress: Experts

    June 7, 2026

    Rs 10,000 monthly SIP vs Rs 10 lakh lump sum: Which can create a higher corpus in 10 years?

    June 7, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    EDITOR'S PICK

    JPMorgan signale des signes de fatigue chez les investisseurs particuliers

    May 15, 2025

    Christopher Dee completes £16m property investments for Oddfellows Manchester

    November 8, 2017

    US treasury auctions off $22 billion of 30 year bonds at a high yield of 4.389%

    October 10, 2024
    Our Picks

    Why HDFC Mutual Fund has restricted fresh lump sum investments in gold schemes should investors be worried?

    June 7, 2026

    Cheshire Premium Bonds winner scoops top prize of £1million

    June 7, 2026

    Rising SIP closures reflect industry maturity, not investor distress: Experts

    June 7, 2026
    Most Popular

    🔥Juve target Chukwuemeka, Inter raise funds, Elmas bid in play 🤑

    August 20, 2025

    💵 Libra responds after Flamengo takes legal action and ‘freezes’ funds

    September 26, 2025

    ₹9000 monthly SIP can help you retire at 45 with ₹2 lakh monthly pension

    May 5, 2026
    © 2026 Fund Focus News
    • Get In Touch
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.