UPDATE: China Moving Ahead To Let Overseas Cos IPO Onshore
08 September 2009 - 9:29PM
Dow Jones News
China may be close to announcing rules that will allow overseas
companies to list shares on the mainland, in a long anticipated
move that would deepen the development of the country's stock
market and pave the way for foreign companies to access flush yuan
capital.
Comments offered Tuesday by China Commerce Minister Chen Deming
and a senior investment banker at Citic Securities Co. (600030.SH),
the country's top brokerage by market value, indicated regulators
were moving ahead on issuing rules, but allowing actual listings
could be some time off.
China will allow "qualified" foreign-invested enterprises to
list shares domestically, the state-run Xinhua News Agency reported
Chen as saying Tuesday at an investment and trade fair in the
southeastern city of Xiamen. The report didn't offer further
details.
Meanwhile, at a financial conference in Beijing, Ted Tokuchi,
managing director and head of investment banking at Citic
Securities, said in a speech Tuesday that China may issue draft
regulations on domestic listings by overseas companies after the
weeklong National Day holiday next month.
China's National Day is Oct. 1, but the public holiday will last
from Oct. 1-8.
The draft rules should cover areas such as capital requirements,
accounting rules, corporate governance, and the remittance of funds
raised from the IPO, he said.
"If the stock market continues to improve, (the China Securities
Regulatory Commission) will soon issue draft rules sometime after
the October 1 holiday," Tokuchi said in his speech.
The securities regulator was making preparations earlier this
year for overseas companies, including red chips, to list shares in
Shanghai, Tokuchi said.
The rules would cover foreign companies and red chips, which are
companies registered and listed overseas, typically Hong Kong, but
whose assets are mostly in mainland China.
Tokuchi said two to three overseas companies, including red
chips, are likely to list in Shanghai next year "if the stock
market is okay."
He said about "five to six" overseas companies have already
submitted applications to issue yuan-denominated A shares,
including U.K.-listed HSBC Holdings PLC (HBC) and stock market
operator NYSE Euronext (NYX).
He said regulators had originally planned to have a red chip
company list in Shanghai before the end of this year, "but due to
the stock market situation, it may be delayed."
He didn't elaborate on what he meant by the stock market
situation, but the bellwether Shanghai index is up about 60% so far
this year. While it has only recently fallen off its year-to-date
highs, concerns persist about asset bubbles inflating share prices
from the flush liquidity underpinning the economy's recovery.
Many observers expect the first overseas companies to list on
the mainland to be red chips. Red chips such as China Mobile Ltd.
(0941.HK) and Lenovo Group Ltd. (LNVGY) have said they are keen to
list in China, as has Australian iron ore miner Fortescue Metals
Group Ltd. (FMG.AU) .
-By J.R. Wu and Victoria Ruan, Dow Jones Newswires; 8610
6588-5848; jr.wu@dowjones.com