The National Council for Social Security Fund announced Monday
the total assets of China's Social Security Fund (SSF), which
totaled 170.8 billion yuan (US$20.8 billion) at the end of
2004.
Xiang Huaicheng, chairman of the council, said that 75 percent of
the total the assets include 114.9 billion yuan (US$14 billion) in
funding from the central government. The fund increased by 38.3
billion yuan (US$4.67 billion) year-on-year.
The pension assets include 26.1 billion yuan (US$3.18 billion) in
revenue from the sale of shares in state-owned enterprises. This
accounts for about 17 percent of the total.
The assets also includes 12.9 billion yuan (US$1.57 billion) in
revenue from lottery sales, about 8 percent of the total.
The total assets include investment as banking deposits (66.7
billion yuan, or US$8.13 billion), bond investment (74.4 billion
yuan, or US$9.07 billion), equity investment (11.3billion yuan, or
US$1.37 billion), and stock market investment (18.4 billion yuan,
or US$2.24 billion).
The chairman said total realized revenues of the fund reached 4.27
billion yuan (US$520 million) in 2004 with an investment yield rate
of 3.1 percent, up 0.39 percent over the previous year.
On its investment strategies for this year, Xiang said the council
will work to improve its investment returns while giving top
priority to risk control.
"Our risk control policy remains unchanged, that is there will be
no net investment losses in each of the coming five years while
striving to raise investment returns," said Xiang.
The ratio of stock market investment to total assets, which stood
at 11 percent, was raised to about 15 percent for this year. The
ratio will increase to about 20 percent if the fund council was
approved later this year to investment overseas by the central
government, said the chairman.
Total capital available for investment this year will be at least
51.4 billion yuan (US$6.26 billion), and up to 17.8 billion yuan
(US$2.17 billion) will be used to invest in the stock markets and
some 26 billion yuan (US$3.17 billion) will be invested in products
with fixed returns, he said.
The fund was created in 2000 as part of China's effort to build up
a national social security network to cope with the growing needs
of its ageing population.
(Xinhua News Agency March 29, 2005)
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