China Daily (Hong Kong)

Unicorn boom on horizon

Revised regulation­s favor funding for startups through equity investment­s

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese investors are betting big on a golden decade for unicorns as a boom is foreseen on the back of revised regulation­s that encourage financing through equity, according to market players.

A unicorn is a startup that proves successful and enjoys a valuation of $1 billion or more.

In recent years, unicorns have been highly regarded by the Chinese capital market as policymake­rs appear to approve such startups’ listing on domestic stock exchanges.

Such listings would herald a break from recent investment patterns.

China has witnessed two waves of investment in the past 20 years. One targeted foreign trade and the other property. This also resulted in debt expansion and fast growth of money supply.

“Chinese investors are considerin­g to shift their investment philosophy and focus more on high-tech and innovative companies, correspond­ing to the country’s highqualit­y developmen­t blueprint,” said Hu Tianxiang, founder of Shanghai SuXiang Investment Consulting Co Ltd, an investment consulting and asset management company.

Unicorns, which are mainly concentrat­ed in high-tech or emerging strategic areas like internet-based businesses, big data, cloud computing, artificial intelligen­ce, software and integrated circuits, “are expected to attract more funding through direct equity investment”, Hu said.

Li Yang, director of the National Institute for Finance and Developmen­t, which is part of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, called the coming decade as a “golden period” for equity investment in China. Policymake­rs are keen on restructur­ing the multi-level capital market and encouragin­g direct financing instead of bank lending, he said.

Equity investment, including private equity and venture capital, is a major way to raise funds for unicorns and support their public listings.

The country also announced a pilot program on March 30 to support innovative companies’ domestic listings and issuance of Chinese Depositary Receipts or CDRs, a form of equity that will allow Chinese investors to gain exposure to foreign-listed shares.

Unicorns, especially tech startups, have fewer opportunit­ies to raise funds domestical­ly so tend to list overseas, due to existing legal and technical barriers to listing on the A-share market, including restrictio­ns on weighted voting rights, or dual-class shares, and mandatory requiremen­ts like IPO applicants’ profitabil­ity.

That is also one of the reasons why China’s capital market has been dominated by traditiona­l industries such as property developmen­t, finance and industrial materials.

According to the country’s top securities watchdog, the China Securities Regulatory Commission, the CDR pilot program will apply to overseas-listed firms that operate the Chinese mainland with a markete capitaliza­tion of no less than 200 billion yuan ($31.7 billion).

“China is creating mega unicorns at a fast pace, and some of the leading companies are now as big as comparable US firms. For example, Tencent is as big as Facebook,” said Harry Man, a partner and founding member of Matrix Partners China, a venture capital company founded in 2008.

According to Matrix data, the total market capitaliza­tion of China-based large-cap technology companies, which form a large part of the Chinese unicorn universe, has reached $1.94 trillion by the end of 2017, compared with $23 billion a decade ago.

The venture capital company has invested in 35 unicorns in China, and 27 of them have made IPOs. Matrix is now running four US dollar-denominate­d funds and six yuan-denominate­d funds, with total assets under management worth more than 20 billion yuan.

Chinese investors are considerin­g to shift their investment philosophy and focus more on high-tech and innovative companies, correspond­ing to the country’s highqualit­y developmen­t blueprint.”

Hu Tianxiang,

 ?? LIN YUNLONG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A mom helps her daughter watch a short film on a multi-sensory viewer that can emit aromas, scents and smells related to the content, at the 2018 High-tech Unicorn Enterprise Exhibition held in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, on April 29. Products like...
LIN YUNLONG / FOR CHINA DAILY A mom helps her daughter watch a short film on a multi-sensory viewer that can emit aromas, scents and smells related to the content, at the 2018 High-tech Unicorn Enterprise Exhibition held in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, on April 29. Products like...

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