Texas governor orders state agencies to sell China assets

By The Straits Times | Created at 2024-11-22 10:29:20 | Updated at 2024-11-22 15:50:15 5 hours ago
Truth

Updated

Nov 22, 2024, 06:23 PM

Published

Nov 22, 2024, 06:18 PM

HONG KONG – The governor of Texas has ordered state agencies to stop investing in China and sell assets there as soon as possible, citing financial and security risks, a sign of rising US-China tensions starting to impact global capital flows.

In a letter to state agencies dated Nov 21 and posted to his website, Republican Greg Abbott said “belligerent actions” of China’s ruling Communist Party have increased risks to Texas’ investments in China, and told investors to get out.

“I direct Texas investing entities that you are prohibited from making any new investments of state funds in China. To the extent you have any current investments in China, you are required to divest at the first available opportunity,” he said.

Texas has been taking an increasingly activist stance in its agencies’ investments, having previously restricted public pension funds from doing business with Wall Street firms that have embraced environmental, social and governance principles.

Its state agencies include the Teacher Retirement System (TRS) of Texas, which had US$210.5 billion (S$284 billion) under management at the end of August, according to its annual report.

The TRS has roughly US$1.4 billion exposure to Chinese yuan and Hong Kong dollar assets, and listed Tencent Holdings as its 10th largest position, worth about US$385 million at current prices.

Mr Abbott’s letter said he told the University of Texas/Texas A&M Investment Management Company (Utimco), which manages nearly US$80 billion, to divest from China earlier in 2024.

Neither Texas Teachers nor Utimco responded immediately to a request for comment outside business hours.

Markets in China fell sharply on Nov 22, with the Shanghai Composite down 3 per cent. Tencent shares were about 2 per cent lower in afternoon trade in Hong Kong, in line with the broader market.

Dealers said trade had been light in Hong Kong and sentiment already weak as the Chinese authorities have disappointed expectations for economic stimulus, but that the news had added to the downbeat mood.

“Even though we all know that there will be more and more policies against China from the US… whenever there’s any news like this, it will hit the sentiment here,” said Mr Steven Leung, executive director at brokerage UOB Kay Hian in Hong Kong. REUTERS

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