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Global Asset Management Review: Issue 4
Welcome to the third issue of Global Asset Management Review.
Global | Publication | December 2025
China’s evolving legislative opening-up continues to offer new opportunities to foreign fund investors across investments in China’s equity, securities, and capital markets. Taken together, recent liberalisations reduce entry barriers, streamline market access, broaden eligible investment scope and exit pathways, and collectively create a more navigable, scalable, and durable platform for global capital deployment in China.
Following the issuance of the nationwide negative list in September 2024, which removed the last restrictions on foreign investment in the manufacturing sector, policy attention has shifted towards the services industry. In April 2025, the Ministry of Commerce released a work plan designed to accelerate the opening-up of the services sector across 20 pilot cities. The work plan sets out 155 pilot tasks across 14 key areas, including the following which further relax foreign ownership restrictions in the services sector:
On 7 July 2025, seven major PRC authorities jointly issued policy measures to ease and encourage onshore reinvestment by FIEs by using their undistributed profits or lawful profits obtained by their foreign investors. Onshore reinvestment includes establishing new subsidiaries, injecting capital into existing subsidiaries, and acquiring assets or equity interests in domestic enterprises. Key initiatives include:
On 27 October 2025, the China Securities Regulatory Commission (the CSRC) unveiled a two-year work plan to optimize the Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor (QFII) regime, aiming to create a more transparent, convenient, and efficient environment for foreign investors and attract more medium-to long-term foreign capital. As background, the QFII regime is designed to allow foreign investors to directly make securities investment etc. into the Chinese market on a cross-border basis.
Notably, the work plan has addressed the practical needs and concerns of foreign investors during their QFII investments. Implementing rules are expected to be issued separately, which are expected to cover the following significant initiatives:
On 16 May 2025, the CSRC issued revised measures for material asset restructuring of listed companies, which took immediate effect. Among the various changes, was a notable reform to shorten the lock-up period applicable to shares of listed companies acquired by private funds through material asset restructuring, thereby providing greater exit flexibility and encouraging private fund participation in mergers and restructurings of listed companies.
More specifically:
Publication
Welcome to the third issue of Global Asset Management Review.
Publication
On 13 November 2025, the European Parliament adopted (subject to certain amendments) the substantive Omnibus Directive which was proposed by the European Commission on 26 February 2025 (see our previous briefing here). On 16 December 2025, the European Parliament adopted further proposed amendments.
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In today’s fast-evolving legal landscape, litigation is becoming more complex, more international, and more strategic than ever before. Understanding the challenges, trends and lessons learned is critical for businesses and their litigation strategy and risk management.
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