China wants tech firms to float at home
CHINA aims to get its home-grown, overseas-listed companies to float on the domestic exchanges through the depositary receipts route, people with knowledge of the matter said, in a plan that would pit Shanghai and Shenzhen against Hong Kong in the battle to host China’s technology giants.
The move forms part of efforts by China to counter the trend of a large number of its domestic tech companies opting for New York or Hong Kong listings instead of their home market, one of the people said.
The guidelines for China depositary receipts, similar to American depositary receipts, are likely to be finalized in the second half of this year by China’s securities regulator, said the two people.
The China Securities Regulatory Commission will start accepting CDR applications from interested firms toward the end of the year, they said, declining to be identified due to the sensitivity of the matter.
A depositary receipt is a financial instrument representing a firm’s publicly traded shares. Trading in depositary receipts rather than the underlying shares reduces administration and transaction costs, both for companies and for investors.
These receipts represent ownership of a set number of company shares that can be listed and traded independently from the underlying stocks, and are often used by emerging market companies to raise capital in the United States and London.
The CSRC plan, if implemented, could give Chinese investors access to leading overseas-listed domestic tech companies including Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, Baidu Inc, JD.com Inc, and Tencent Holdings Ltd.
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