China Daily

Securities regulator approves trust IPO

First listing in more than two decades for a vibrant sector that is booming

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China’s securities regulator has approved the nation’s first IPO by a trust company in more than two decades.

Shandong Internatio­nal Trust Co won approval from the China Securities Regulatory Commission to sell as many as 676.5 million shares in a Hong Kong IPO, said one of its shareholde­rs, Luxin Venture Capital, in a filing on Friday. Shandong Internatio­nal Trust plans to seek roughly $300 million from the sale, people with knowledge of the matter said early last year.

Chinese trust companies, with 18 trillion yuan ($2.6 trillion) of assets under management as of September, gather and pool money from wealthy investors to buy assets from stocks and bonds to art and wine as well as finance projects such as real estate and coal mines. The industry’s expansion has been fueled by demand from corporate borrowers that have difficulty getting loans from banks, as well as investors eager for products with higher returns, putting it among the fastestgro­wing segments of China’s shadow-banking system.

The most recent listings from a Chinese trust company were in 1994, when Shaanxi Internatio­nal Trust Co and Anxin Trust Co sold shares in the domestic market, according to data from Bloomberg. The industry has gone through six periods of industry overhaul since the 1979 establishm­ent of China Internatio­nal Trust & Investment Co by the late Vice-President Rong Yiren. Their functions have evolved from central and local government­s’ borrowing arms to loan issuers and asset managers.

The Shandong Internatio­nal Trust, establishe­d in 1987, had 241 billion yuan of assets under management­bytheendof­May, ranking it 20th among China’s 68 trust firms, according to its pre-listing documents. Stateowned Shandong Lucion Investment Holdings Group Co is the controllin­g shareholde­r with a 69 percent stake.

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