"The US market provides Chinese TMT companies with a comparatively friendlier growth environment. Regardless of whether you are listing on NYSE or NASDAQ, there are more flexible regulations," Ng says. "Another reason is that most of the Chinese TMT companies have business models that originate in the US."
An increasing number of Chinese Internet companies have been rushing to go public in the United States since the second half of 2013 after Wall Street closed its doors to Chinese companies for two years because of accounting scandals and critical reports from short-sellers.
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He views the TMT sector as a beneficiary of China's policy of supporting small and medium-sized enterprises and providing a healthy environment for their growth.
"The Chinese market is so big; there will be a steady stream of companies that will make it," Ng says, "and some will grow to a certain size, become a leader in their industrial segment and then they might reach the stage to go ahead with an IPO."
While ADR is considered a niche market, it's not an easy one. While few banks offer the service, those that do tend to be large, strong competitors, Ng says.
Aside from Deutsche Bank, the other leaders in ADR are JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup and Bank of New York Mellon. Together they contribute to a highly competitive and pressurized market with falling margins and a higher expectation of service by clients.
"Pretty much every one of our deals came after severe competition," Ng says. "To win any of them is no easy feat."
At this stage, the IPO candidate that everyone on Wall Street is trying to woo is Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, a dominant force in China's e-commerce industry. When asked whether Deutsche Bank would pitch for Alibaba's ADR business, Ng said he can't comment on individual companies.
However, it doubtless would be difficult for any company in the world to pass up the opportunity to participate in a deal with the potential to raise $20 billion in the US.