The Shanghai State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission (SASAC) has released "16 Measures" to overhaul how state capital interacts with the technology venture capital ecosystem.
The policy aims to convert rigid state-owned assets into "patient capital," specifically targeting "hard tech" and early-stage startups that require long-term conviction rather than immediate returns.
By introducing market-standard practices like differentiated management fees and market-responsive pricing, Shanghai is breaking the traditional constraints that have historically hindered state-backed VCs. The directive encourages large state-owned enterprises to launch Corporate Venture Capital (CVC) arms, effectively turning industrial giants into tech incubators for the city’s "2+3+6+6" modern industrial sectors. To fix the "exit" bottleneck common in Chinese VC, the measures promote S-funds and M&A vehicles, allowing state investors to trade fund shares at market value to maintain liquidity.
For U.S. venture capitalists and tech firms, this move represents a strategic professionalization of Chinese state investment. Shanghai is adopting Western VC staples—such as carried interest, co-investment schemes, and "individual vote" decision-making—to attract elite management talent and speed up deal flow.
This pivot ensures that even as global fundraising faces headwinds, China’s domestic tech sector will have access to a sophisticated, state-backed capital engine designed to compete for dominance in frontier technologies.