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Policy on firms’ HK listing remains unchanged
DALIAN—Shang Fulin, chairman
of the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), said Thursday that
the CSRC has not made any changes in its policies governing the stock
listings of mainland firms in Kong Kong.
Shang’s remarks was a response to earlier media reports that CSRC would
not approve initial public offerings of mainland firms in Kong Kong
unless the size of the IPO exceeds one billion U.S. dollars or the firms
plan spontaneous listings in the mainland and Hong Kong.
“China will continue to support Hong Kong as the international financial
center,” Shang said at a seminar at the Inaugural Annual Meeting of the
New Champions hosted by the World Economic Forum in China’s northeastern
coastal city of Dalian.
“The news on the one billion U.S. dollars threshold came from nowhere.
The central government didn’t make any changes and what changed is the
market.”
The mainland halted the yuan-denominated IPOs when it carried out
share-holding reforms between May 2005 and mid-2006.
“Therefore, many large mainland commercial banks chose to get listed in
Hong Kong as they badly need to raise money to supplement their capital
in an effort to facilitate reforms,” he noted.
The mainland stock markets picked up rally since 2006, ending years of
slump, upon the completion of reforms that transformed controlling
state-owned shares in most listed firms into tradable shares.
The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index rose 1.56 percent to 5,393.66
points on Thursday, more than doubling since the beginning of the year.
“Many companies opt to list in the mainland bourses as the IPO prices
are higher than those in Hong Kong,” Shang said.
Some firms are still likely to be listed in Hong Kong in the future for
other purposes including boosting management models and corporate
governance other than money-raising itself as the experience tells us,
he noted.
Shang acknowledged that decisive factor behind the IPOs on the mainland
is that the companies want to expand influence more effectively as their
majority customers are from the mainland. Chinese friendship association
held a reception here Thursday to celebrate the 59th anniversary of the
foundation of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK).
Feng Zuoku, vice president of the Chinese People’s Association for
Friendship with Foreign Countries (CPAFFC), said at the reception that
China and the DPRK are friendly neighbors which are joined by common
mountains and rivers and as close as lips and teeth. “The traditional
friendship, which was created and nurtured by the leaders of the older
generation of both countries, has been deeply rooted in the hearts of
the two peoples,” said Feng at the reception, jointly held by the CPAFFC
and the China-DPRK Friendship Association.—Xinhua |