President Xi calls for stock market to prioritize its financing function
PRESIDENT Xi Jinping’s latest remarks on the stock market have charted a course for future reforms and signaled a bigger role for the market in supporting the economy, analysts said.
During a meeting of top economic officials on Tuesday, Xi urged the development of a stock market with sound financing functions, regulation and investor rights protection.
By giving priority to the financing role of the market, the president’s call was seen as a response to some deep-seated problems, such as excessive controls on initial public offerings and rampant insider trading, economists said.
“Xi’s remarks set the future direction for stock market development,” said Xu Gao, chief economist of Everbright Securities.
“The market has not performed well as a financing vehicle, which should actually be its fundamental role.”
Unlike in more mature economies like the United States, the stock market only contributes a small part to corporate financing in China. In the first eight months of this year, direct financing, including stocks and bonds, accounted for less than a fifth of the country’s total social financing, according to official data.
While the government tries to expand the share of stock financing, the public often sees the market as a tool for money-grabbing by listed firms instead of a platform for value investment.
“To let the stock market play a better role in financing, the government needs to improve its rules, including overhauling the approval system for IPOs and reducing interventions in their pricing,” said Li Xunlei, chief economist with Haitong Securities.
Investors should also be allowed to use effective legal means, such as class actions, to protect their legitimate interests and increase compensation costs for listed firms who cook the books, said Lin Caiyi, chief economist of Guotai Junan Securities.
China’s stock market has seen rapid development, but listing and trading is still distorted by administrative forces and imperfect regulation rather than based on corporate performance.
For example, IPOs are limited in number and require authorities’ approval, while the supply of funds is unrestricted as millions of individual investors seek returns that are better than bank interest rates.
As a result, the prices of new shares are pushed high, providing profits for original shareholders of the listed companies.
Meanwhile, the lack of truthful information disclosure and frequent insider trading often lead to market volatility, causing losses for retail investors.
The problems became more evident during a market rout in the summer. Regulators halted IPOs in July after the market index fell 30 percent from its June 12 peak.
Last week, authorities announced their resumption and introduced significant changes to procedures, allowing investors to subscribe without paying into escrow accounts in advance, giving more priority to information disclosure instead of pre-IPO approvals, and simplifying procedures for smaller listings.
The moves were viewed as preludes to a change to a registration-based one, giving a bigger say to the market while improving regulation.
Chinese firms have seen their debt burdens soar since the global financial crisis, as an industrial glut and weak trade hurt their profits and slowed the economy.
The ratio of debt owed by non-financial firms to the country’s GDP was 317 percent last year, up from 195 percent in 2007.
A healthier stock market will also boost China’s innovation drive, which is at the core of economic upgrades and demands more financing with an appetite for risk, said Lu Qiang, a researcher at Genial Flow Asset Management.
“A lot of innovation-based companies will be formed and then disappear. Their financing cannot rely on banks, which favor big firms with mature operations and steady cash flow,” he said.
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