A team headed by Wang Yanzhi, an official with China's foreign exchange regulator, has been formed to formally operate the fund announced by President Xi Jinping last year.
Wang has been named the general manager of the fund. Jin Qi, 59, the assistant governor of the People's Bank of China, the central bank, will be the fund's chief executive, while Zhu Surong, governor of the Urumqi branch of the PBOC in the Xinjiang, will be one of the board members of the fund, state-run China Daily reported.
It has drawn wide international attention amid publicity blitz launched by Chinese official media since last year.
The fund is by far the largest amount China has ever proposed to finance multilateral projects in the Eurasian economic circle, the daily said.
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About 65 per cent of the fund will come from China's USD four trillion foreign exchange reserves.
China Investment Corp, the country's sovereign wealth fund, will hold 15 per cent stake in the Silk Road Fund.
The Silk Road projects involved a maze of roads and ports connecting Asia, Europe and Africa.
India, which has been invited to take part in the Bangladesh, China, India, Myanmar (BCIM) road and the Maritime Sill Road (MSR), said it will give a selective backing for the initiative.
While India is taking part in the meetings for BCIM, it is yet to give its response on MSR.
External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj during her just concluded visit here said India will not provide any blanket endorsement for the Silk Road plans.