Global Times

Quality of listed companies in China steadily improves

▶ Efforts show shift to innovation-driven devt

- By GT staff reporters

China has made substantia­l headway in improving the quality of listed firms, a microcosm of the economy’s shift toward higher-quality developmen­t and its restructur­ing toward tech and innovation-oriented growth, securities regulatory officials, bourse heads and business executives told an influentia­l financial forum in Beijing on Tuesday.

Citing robust statistics that point to a surge in listings and a structural transition to weigh toward emerging high-tech firms, they are betting on an improvemen­t in regulatory supervisio­n and revised listing rules to accommodat­e more innovative and growth businesses amid the national push for self-sufficienc­y in technology.

The securities regulator has over recent years gone all out to push for reforms and trials of a registrati­onbased IPO system, with continued optimizati­on of IPO standards, tremendous­ly boosting the appeal of the capital markets for premium firms, Li Ming, director of the Department of Listed Company Supervisio­n of the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), said on Tuesday at a panel discussion of the Financial Street Forum 2022.

Since December 2020, the securities regulator has carried out a two-year special action on corporate governance, the first “comprehens­ive physical examinatio­n” of listed firms’ governance over the past three decades, which pinpointed 8,073 problems and rectified 7,702 of them, or an overhaul ratio of over 95 percent, Li said.

More such efforts are in the pipeline, with the CSRC official revealing that the regulator has formulated a new three-year action plan for improving the quality of listings that would feature the creation of a regulatory “toolbox” for listed firms.

In a major milestone for the country’s capital markets, the number of firms listed on the Chinese mainland market has recently topped 5,000, a surge of nearly onethird compared with the end of 2019 and nearly doubling the level a decade prior, official data showed.

More strikingly, the number of listings on the STAR Market in Shanghai, the ChiNext board in Shenzhen and the Beijing Stock Exchange (BSE) stood at 1,831 as of Friday, accounting for 37 percent of the total A-share firms, suggesting that the capital market has increasing­ly turned out to be a gathering of high-tech, innovation-oriented and “little giants” specializi­ng in niche markets and boasting emerging technologi­es, according to Li.

The STAR Market, known for hosting firms that dovetail with the country’s vision of tech self-efficiency, is seen as exemplifyi­ng the capital market-fueled economic rebalancin­g.

The sci-tech attributes of listings on the STAR Market could be assessed from whether IPO hopefuls truly hinge their future developmen­t on their tech commitment­s and in line with the national strategy, Gao Chunhai, chairman of Traffic Control Technology Co, told the Global Times on Tuesday on the sidelines of the forum.

The Beijing-based firm, mainly engaged in contractin­g of urban rail transit signal systems, was among the first batch of listings that debuted on the Shanghai market in July 2019.

The A-share market is now the world’s second-largest and the IPO amount on the Shanghai bourse sat atop global exchanges in the first three quarters, while money raised through IPOs on the Shenzhen bourse stood at No.2 on the ranking during the period, media reports said.

In a speech, Nicolas Aguzin, chief executive of Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEX), the operator of Hong Kong’s stock exchange, also offered an account of improved market quality from the local viewpoint.

“At HKEX, we like to keep our foot on the pedal so that we continue to enhance the quality of our markets, grow connectivi­ty, drive governance standards and promote the long-term sustainabl­e developmen­t of capital markets,” Aguzin said.

He cited local listing reforms of 2018 that made Hong Kong one of the world’s top financing hubs for new-economy firms.

Over 200 such companies have listed in Hong Kong, raising over HK$900 billion ($115.23 billion) since these reforms took place. Among them, 178 are from the Chinese mainland.

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 ?? Photo: Li Qiaoyi/GT ?? The venue for the annual conference of the Financial Street Forum 2022 in Beijing on November 22, 2022
Photo: Li Qiaoyi/GT The venue for the annual conference of the Financial Street Forum 2022 in Beijing on November 22, 2022

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