Listed firms may be allowed to sell shares
) J! s, _) r6 c: T! X; W: h8 D The country's regulators will consider allowing listed firms to sell shares as a first step toward lifting its suspension on new IPOs in domestic markets, but no timetable has been set, domestic media reported Monday. China is proceeding with a series of market reforms aimed at reviving its shares markets, which remain mired in a four-year slump.* `4 q O1 j! i9 \8 @
In mid-2005, China suspended new IPOs in domestic markets in an effort to prop up sagging stock prices, weighed down by investor concerns over the share-reform plan to sell more than US$250 billion in State-held shares.# C7 Q9 p2 s. i5 z+ M/ G
"We will look at allowing listed companies to sell shares before approving any new IPOs," the Financial News quoted Shang Fulin, the top securities regulator, as saying at a conference.7 Q, f& ]& z2 b2 |" W: g; `
Reforms in state-held shares need to be built upon solid capital markets, said Shang, adding that the last mile of reforms would be the most difficult.
5 n- b9 y: i% n h7 @ Last month, China scrapped capital gains taxes for foreign stock investors. x& T( h% \1 K! _ r) e
The government is intensifying efforts to lure foreign cash into its main stock market, via a Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor (QFII) scheme that lets overseas firms invest in primary stock and debt markets.5 R& i4 y2 S, f( o( \* x
The index was Asia's worst performing major market benchmark stock index in both 2005 and 2004.* [6 i% P) z9 ~7 s
While trying to reform inefficient capital markets to give domestic firms another fund-raising option besides banks, China is also trying to enhance corporate transparency and boost profitability.4 I0 l4 O! X; q. C; [6 m0 A3 }5 Z
Shang's comments come after a leading economic official said Saturday that efforts to revive its sickly stock markets are likely to work only if "poor quality" listed companies are eliminated from trading.
7 W% M' m+ C$ `" W "Raising the quality of China's listed companies is the only permanent cure that can ensure public investors' fundamental interests," said Cheng Siwei, a vice chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress |