CX Daily: What to Look Out For at the 20th Party National Congress
October 14, 2022
China has no timetable for easing its “zero-Covid” policy yet, a top epidemiologist says.?A former disease control chief in Guilin is sentenced to 10 years in prison. Chinese local governments sell more bonds for infrastructure stimulus. Plus, XPeng’s affiliate tests a self-flying car in Dubai. If you haven’t already, click?here?to sign up for this briefing.
By Kevin Guo
TOP STORIES
Congress?/
The Communist Party of China’s 20th National Congress?will convene this Sunday?to kick off the weeklong political meeting that will set the course for the country’s development trajectories for the next five years.
Some 2,300 delegates representing the party’s 96.7 million membership will gather in Beijing to determine national priorities and elect a new Central Committee, the party’s top decision-making body.?The 200 or so members will in turn name the seven people on the Politburo Standing Committee who will lead the country until 2027.
Covid-19?/
Senior Chinese health expert Liang Wannian said?the country has no timetable?for easing its “zero-Covid” policy after next year’s “Two Sessions” — the annual meetings of the country’s top lawmakers and political advisers held typically in March.
Liang, head of a National Health Commission expert panel, made the remarks Wednesday in an interview with state broadcaster CCTV. Several official media outlets, including the?People’s Daily?and the Xinhua News Agency,?reiterated that China must stick to the policy, dashing hopes of a gradual easing after the Communist Party’s 20th National Congress?scheduled to begin Sunday.
Corruption?/
A former disease control center director in China?has been sentenced to 10 years?in prison after authorities found he accepted 3.64 million yuan ($507,420) in bribes from three biopharmaceutical companies in exchange for helping boost sales of their vaccines and testing reagents.
An investigation found that?Pan Dingquan, former head of the center for disease control and prevention in Guilin,?South China’s Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, had illegal ties with two local biopharma firms, according to a court verdict released Oct. 1.
Bonds?/
Around 20 localities in China?are using extra government bonds?this year to finance infrastructure projects in yet another round of efforts to boost the country’s slowing economy.
As of this week, at least 19 cities and provincial-level regions reported available unused?special-purpose bond?quotas. The State Council told local governments in August?to deploy more than 500 billion yuan ($70 billion) in unused borrowing quotas for investing in infrastructure.
Trust?/
China’s $3 trillion trust industry?faces another revamp?as regulators introduce new rules to bring the once-freewheeling industry under effective oversight.
Several trust companies received notices from regulators telling them to report on business operations using new business categories, Caixin learned.?The move suggests that new rules outlined in April to categorize trust businesses with specific requirements have been put into effect, triggering an industrywide overhaul.
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UBS?/
UBS Futures Co. Ltd.?became?the first foreign company?to trade Chinese commodity futures through the country’s Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor (QFII) program, which recently expanded its investment scope.
The Shanghai-based company, controlled by Swiss financial giant UBS AG,?executed the first trade of domestic commodity futures for QFIIs in China Tuesday,?it said in a statement.
Quick hits?/
Flying car?/
A self-flying car developed by an affiliate of Chinese electric-car maker?XPeng Inc.?finished its first overseas test flight?Monday in Dubai, a modest step toward the company’s goal of starting sales within the next two years.
The XPeng X2, developed by?XPeng Aeroht which calls itself Asia’s largest flying car company,?is one of several so-called electric vertical takeoff and landing vehicle (eVTOL) projects now underway worldwide.
Excavators?/
Domestic sales of Chinese excavators?dropped 24.5% year-on-year?in September — the smallest decline of any month this year — as a sluggish property market and sporadic Covid lockdowns continued to weigh on the sector, a state-backed industry group said.
But overseas demand more than made up for the shortfall, driving an overall sales increase of 5.5% year-on-year to 21,200 units,?the largest monthly increase this year, according to the data, which was released by the China Construction Machinery Association (CCMA) Tuesday.
Quick hits?/
Long Read?/
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