While developed markets grapple with sticky inflation and slowing growth, Chinese equities have begun attracting a fresh wave of foreign interest. The divergence is real, and it is reshaping how institutional investors think about geographic allocation in 2026.
China carries plenty of baggage. Geopolitical friction between Beijing and Washington has not meaningfully eased. Regulatory unpredictability remains a constant concern for foreign capital. And the property sector hangover, while not new, has not fully resolved either.
Foreign holdings in Chinese stocks and bonds reached RMB 4.2 trillion by Q1 2020, and that appetite appears to be returning in selective, cautious waves. Investors are picking their spots, focusing on sectors where Beijing’s policy direction is clearer, domestic consumption plays, green energy, and state-backed technology.
China banned crypto trading and mining in 2021. That ban remains fully in effect. So while the rest of the world spent 2023 and 2024 debating ETF approvals, spot Bitcoin products, and on-chain institutional infrastructure, China sat that entire conversation out.
China Renaissance is developing a BNB-focused investment vehicle, a notable move that signals how some Chinese-linked financial institutions operating outside the mainland are leaning into crypto through regional structures rather than waiting for Beijing to change course.










