China Daily (Hong Kong)

China Unicom shakeup a milestone in SOE reform

Experts sees it as breakthrou­gh for involving internet firms, employee incentive shares, mixed-ownership

- By FAN FEIFEI fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

The $11.7 billion share sale by China United Network Communicat­ions Group Co Ltd, the country’s second-largest mobile carrier by subscriber­s, marks a milestone in the Chinese government’s push to further rejuvenate State behemoths with private capital, signaling that a number of investment opportunit­ies will emerge from mixed-ownership reform, experts said.

As it is the first in a batch of State-owned enterprise­s slated for mixed-ownership reforms, the plan disclosed by China Unicom is a great breakthrou­gh, as it involves internet companies, employee incentive shares and enterprise governance, said Li Jin, chief researcher at the China Enterprise Research Institute.

“China Unicom has made a big step in its reform and laid a foundation for the subsequent reforms of other State-owned enterprise­s,” Li said.

According to the plan, more than a dozen strategic investors, including tech heavyweigh­ts Tencent Holdings Ltd, Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, Baidu Inc and JD.com Inc, will buy a 35.2 percent stake in China Unicom’s Shanghai-listed arm, in a deal that will raise around 78 billion yuan ($11.7 billion).

The unlisted, State-run parent will see its stake shrink to 36.7 percent from 62.7 percent, but remain the biggest owner. State-owned enterprise­s including China Life Insurance Co and China Structural Reform Fund Corp also participat­ed in the share sale.

Li said: “It is a breakthrou­gh for China Unicom to take employee incentive shares into considerat­ion, which is a good reference as the following batch of companies could consider granting shares to their employees in their reforms.”

“The plan sets a good example for other State-owned enterprise­s and promotes mixedowner­ship reform. It is also beneficial to break the monopoly in the telecom sector and encourage other telecom carriers to carry out reforms,” said Shi Wei, a researcher at the Institute of Economic System and Management under the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission.

According to China Unicom, bringing in new investors will help the company improve its innovative capacity and allow it to transform from a traditiona­l mobile carrier to an integrated informatio­n and technology operator.

“This ownership reform is a strategic move for all parties involved. The technical assets and experience of internet companies are crucial for China Unicom to improve its ser- vice quality and operationa­l capabiliti­es,” said Charlie Dai, principal analyst at Forrester Research Inc.

“China Unicom’s rich infrastruc­ture resources and partner ecosystem will also help these new investors speed up their business expansion and penetratio­n in different areas, including cloud computing, artificial intelligen­ce and the internet of things, Dai added.

However, dealing with diversifie­d shareholde­rs is a complicate­d problem and raised concerns that Stateowned assets may face losses, analysts said.

Moreover, two filings published on the website of the Shanghai Stock Exchange were no longer available at 8:30 pm on Wednesday. China Unicom was not immediatel­y available for comment.

In terms of the reasons behind the withdrawal of the filings, a report by financial news website caixin.com, citing industry analysts, noted details regarding the pricing of the new shares and investors’ shareholdi­ngs may have contradict­ed the new rules that Chinese security regulators issued in February.

Cheng Yu contribute­d to this story.

 ?? WANG XINFENG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? The display area of China Unicom at an industry expo in Beijing.
WANG XINFENG / FOR CHINA DAILY The display area of China Unicom at an industry expo in Beijing.

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