AIIB president Jin Liqun said during a business forum held in the northwestern Chinese city of Xi'an yesterday that other regional infrastructure lenders and financial institutions have also expressed interest in co-financing opportunities with AIIB.
China last year cleared a proposal to invest its pensionfundsvalued about USD 315 bin stocks and equities after the government sets rules to regulate the change.
Observers said China may seriously consider investing the funds in AIIB projects as most of the infrastructure finance to different countries goes through their governments which ensure safety and better returns.
AIIB has already approved four loans totaling USD 509 million to fund infrastructure projects in Bangladesh, Pakistan, Tajikistan and Indonesia.
Three of them are expected to be co-financed with partners including the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.
AIIB will begin reviewing membership applications from some 30 countries in September as it calls on more countries to join its infrastructure funding efforts.
Jin added that the world's first multilateral infrastructure lender led by a developing country will chart a new course in funding projects while learning best practices from established lenders.
The AIIB was founded in December 2015 and counts many major developed countries, including the United Kingdom, Germany, Australia and Singapore, as prospective founding members, state run Xinhua news agency reported.
TheAIIBwas officially established late last year with 57 founding members.
With authorised capital of USD 100 billion, China is the largest shareholder with 26.06 per cent voting shares.
India is the second largest shareholder with 7.5 per cent followed by Russia 5.93 per cent and Germany with 4.5 per cent.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
