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China targets overseas-traded companies as IPO resumption looms
(Bloomberg)
Updated: 2006-02-10 11:23

China's securities regulator plans to favor listings by big and overseas-traded companies once a ban on domestic share sales is lifted, aiming to revive stock markets that reached eight-year lows last year.

The China Securities Regulatory Commission has proposed to relax some listing rules and recommended allowing Chinese companies listed abroad to raise funds locally by selling China Depositary Receipts, according to a draft document sent to brokerages for consultation and obtained by Bloomberg News.

Many of China's biggest and most profitable companies, including PetroChina Co. and China Mobile (Hong Kong) Ltd., are traded in Hong Kong and New York and not in the mainland. China stopped domestic share sales in May to avoid a flood of equity as companies pursued plans to make more than $200 billion of mostly state-owned stock tradable.

"The government is encouraging quality companies to list domestically to increase the attractiveness of the market," said Lu Jiehua, an analyst at Shenyin Wanguo Securities Co. in Shanghai. "Regulators are working to resume share sales soon, and I expect the ban to be lifted in the second quarter."

The Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges were the world's fourth- and third-worst performers in 2005 because the smaller, state-owned manufacturers that dominate the markets weren't the driving force of the world's fastest-growing major economy. The Shanghai Composite Index, which gained 9.3 percent this year, is still 43 percent below its 2001 peak.

Draft Rules

"Regulators should give certain preferential policies to help big, quality companies list domestically,'' the commission said in the document, which was sent to brokerages last month. Dai Biao, spokesman for the regulator, declined to comment.

The draft rules scrap limits on the amount that can be raised in initial public offerings, currently set at twice net assets, and on transactions with affiliates, which are capped at 30 percent of annual sales under existing regulations.

"The draft relaxes the rules on IPOs," Mao Haolie, who helps arrange share sales at Everbright Securities Co. in Shanghai, said. ``It's a sign that domestic share sales will resume soon.''


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