Hong Kong's stock exchange has told investors it expects them to hit the limit of shares they can buy via its trading link with Shanghai by the end of March, a development that will pressure China to lift the quota to prevent the scheme grinding to a near halt.
A quick decision to raise or even remove the 300 billion yuan ($48 billion) aggregate limit on purchases of Shanghai shares through the Hong Kong-Shanghai Stock Connect scheme would represent a major vote of confidence for the pilot programme.
However, Beijing may be torn between a desire to further open up its capital markets and concerns that opening the flood gates to more short-term investors, who have dominated the scheme's early trade flows, will increase market volatility.
Wednesday's cut to China's reserve requirement ratio will add to those concerns, given previous such moves have been credited with triggering leverage-fuelled rallies in Chinese stocks.
After a slower than expected start in the days after the November 17 launch, a 53 percent year-end rise in Chinese equities has attracted banks, hedge funds and Hong Kong-based funds, who have now filled up nearly one third of the quota according to Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing data.
That's despite many large mutual and pension funds remaining on the sidelines of the scheme due to regulatory and technical problems.
At the current pace of usage, and as more firms come on board, this quota will be filled by around the end of the first quarter, Hong Kong exchange executive Tae Yoo told an industry seminar hosted by the Irish Funds Industry Association (IFIA) in Hong Kong last month.
A trading uptick in late December and early January means quota take-up has grown increasingly active, said Yoo, who oversees fixed income currency and client business development.
"At this pace, if it continues, by end of first quarter, in two or two-and-a-half months, you're looking at a full quota," he said.
Yoo added that the exchange was in a dialogue with regulators and the Shanghai bourse over the quota and that he anticipated discussing whether to raise or even remove it altogether when the quota was close to being reached.
If the limit is not raised, investors will only be able to buy more Shanghai shares through Stock Connect as and when other firms free-up the quota by selling stocks.
Given the hesitant start of the trading scheme, few investors expected that limit would be reached so soon.
Responding to a request for comment by Reuters, a spokesman for the Hong Kong exchange said it "monitors quota use and will discuss the issue with the relevant authorities at the appropriate time."
Hitting the limit for so-called Northbound purchases could be problematic for Hong Kong-based foreign investors, as they have also nearly exhausted a 270 billion yuan quota granted to them under a parallel cross-border investment scheme known as RQFII.
The Hong Kong exchange has said it regards the Stock Connect quota as a speed bump that can be removed over time, but the final decision will likely rest with China's State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE), which has been slow to raise quotas in the past. SAFE could not be reached for comment.
Regulatory hurdles have so far kept the largest global investors out of the Stock Connect scheme, suggesting demand for the Northbound quota, which is limited to 13 billion yuan per day, could explode once these players come on board.
Dean Chisholm, head of operations for Asia Pacific at asset manager Invesco, said a daily quota squeeze would make it hard to launch investment products targeting Chinese equities.
"People who need access to liquidity on a daily basis, for example exchange-traded-funds, will be very hesitant about using Stock Connect," he said.
Some foreign institutional investors have already been pushing for the Stock Connect limit to be raised, according to industry insiders. They fear the quota will be almost used up by the time they have won the green light from their home regulators to use the scheme.
"Demand from managers is clear and the IFIA is addressing the remaining issues with the relevant authorities," said Pat Lardner, CEO of the IFIA.
"Ensuring sufficient quota to meet the demand we expect is therefore also essential."