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  • Changes to the construction and design regimes are needed if China wants to attract more foreign investment into the industry and increase its own standing in the global market. By John Cole, Philip Nunn and Michael Hickman of Simmons & Simmons
  • Patrick Lines, Thomas E Jones and Susan Finder of Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer explain China's new financial derivatives regulations and the opportunities they provide for institutions allowed to trade in these products for the first time
  • Foreign banks have to overcome many regulatory challenges to introduce new products to the China market. Robert Chen of King & Wood explains
  • Interest in China's non-performing loan market is rising. Now the government needs to follow through with additional legislative and regulatory developments, says James Olson of Heller Ehrman White & McAuliffe LLP
  • Foreign investors can now buy state-owned shares in Chinese listed companies, although many approvals are needed and the regulatory framework is less than perfect. Jon L Christianson, Alec P Tracy and Fei Qiao of Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom LLP & Affiliates explain
  • Hubert Lem, head of China matters in the law division of Morgan Stanley Asia, tells IFLR what more regulators should do to give foreign investors greater confidence in the mainland
  • As China slowly opens its banking industry, foreign financial institutions are increasingly looking to make strategic investments. Charles Qin, Jonathan Pan, Stanley Cha and Roy Zhang of Llinks Law Office outline the options for investors
  • Jeanette K Chan and Marcia Ellis of Paul Weiss Rifkind Wharton & Garrison LLP evaluate the ways to structure foreign investment in China’s telecoms companies under new M&A regulations
  • China is getting closer to formulating a legal framework to allow qualified domestic institutional investors to tap overseas capital markets, although the details need working out. Neil Torpey, Jon Lewis and Todd Liao of Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker LLP explain
  • Denis Brock, Eu Jin Chua and Kathryn Sanger of Clifford Chance outline the issues foreign parties will face when involved in China's most popular method of dispute resolution