The Borneo Post

China’s Xiaomi announces pioneering listing plan

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SHANGHAI : Smar tphone maker Xiaomi yesterday became the first Chinese comapany to announce plans to issue securities on mainland China markets under a trial programme aimed at encouragin­g the country’s tech giants to list at home.

X i a omi , one of the world’s largest smartphone manufactur­ers that is planning a primary listing in Hong Kong, said in a regulatory fi ling that it will also issue Chinese Depositary Receipts ( CDR) on the Shanghai Stock Exchange.

After watching technology heavyweigh­ts Alibaba and Baidu list on Wal l Street, Chinese authorit ies have devised a programme under which companies listed outside the country can simultaneo­usly list CDRs at home.

The objectives of the plan include helping to develop China’s still relatively immature and volatile share markets while allowing domestic investors to invest in the country’s big tech champions.

The China Se cu r i t ie s Regulatory Commission (CSRC) finalised the rules governing the trial programme last week but it remains unknown when it could start.

Alibaba and Hong Kong-listed Tencent have expressed an interest in the plan.

Xiaomi’s filing said the CDRs would be listed at the same time as its main debut in Hong Kong, with its initial public offering expected to raise US$ 10 billion, valuing it at US$ 100 billion.

That could make it the world’s biggest IPO since Alibaba’s US$ 25 billion debut in 2014 in New York.

Beijing-based Xiaomi provided no specifics on the number of CDRs to be issued or a timetable.

But it said 40 percent of the funds raised through CDRs would go to global expansion and the rest on product developmen­t and expansion of its mobile internet ecosystem.

Xiaomi shipped 28 million smartphone­s worldwide from January to March, an 88-percent surge year- on-year.

That was fourth in the world af ter Samsung, Apple and China’s Huawei, according to figures from the Internatio­nal Data Corporatio­n ( IDC).

Companies must show at least three years’ profit before they can list in China, ruling out cash- burning start- ups.

But China also is discussing relaxing such restrictio­ns to allow a new generation of emerging technology titans to list at home.

China has more such ‘unicorns’ – start- ups valued at a US$ 1 billion or more – than any other country, including Alibaba’s mobile- payments pioneer Ant Financial, ride- sharing’s Didi Chuxing, and online- services platform Meituan- Dianping. — AFP

 ??  ?? Smartphone maker Xiaomi on June 11 became the first Chinese company to announce plans to issue securities on mainland China markets under a trial programme aimed at encouragin­g the country’s tech giants to list at home. — AFP photo
Smartphone maker Xiaomi on June 11 became the first Chinese company to announce plans to issue securities on mainland China markets under a trial programme aimed at encouragin­g the country’s tech giants to list at home. — AFP photo

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