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Domestic Institutional Investor - DII
What Does Domestic Institutional Investor - DII
Mean?
An institutional investor that has met certain qualifications to
invest in securities outside its home country. The most popular
DII program comes from the People's Republic of China, where the
main regulatory body (the China Securities Regulatory Commission)
may grant a limited avenue for institutional investors such as
banks, funds and investment companies to invest in foreign-based
securities.
The overall restrictions on ownership are in place for several
reasons, including currency conversion concerns in nations where
the currency is not free-floating.
Domestic Institutional Investor - DII
DII programs are used in places where the capital markets are not
yet completely open to all investors. For example, any
institutional investor in China that obtains approval to be a DII
may invest up to 50% of net assets into allowable foreign
securities, so long as not more than 5% is invested in any one
security. Only certain foreign markets are eligible for
investment, including Britain and Hong Kong.
The DII program in China was set up partly to provide the growing
number of domestic investors with a place to park their funds;
only a few hundred local stocks are listed on the Shanghai and
Shenzhen stock exchanges.
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