China Daily

New rules to regulate share sales by top investors

- By LI XIANG lixiang@chinadaily.com.cn

China will issue new rules to better regulate share sales by major shareholde­rs of listed companies in an attempt to prevent it from burdening the country’s fragile stock market, the securities regulator said on Tuesday.

The announceme­nt came as the stock-selling ban imposed by the regulator on major shareholde­rs to stem the marketrout in the summer is set to expire on Friday.

The lifting of the ban has been haunting A-share investors and it was attributed as one of factors that caused Monday’s massive sell-off. The steep market slide triggered the circuit breaker mechanism that resulted in an unpreceden­ted trading halt of equities, index futures and options.

Media reports suggested that the regulator will extend the current share sale ban until the introducti­on of the new rules.

Officials at the China Securities Regulatory Commission declined to comment on the matter when contacted.

Two listed companies contactedb­y China Daily said they have not received any notice from the regulator or the stock exchanges about the extension of the selling ban.

Deng Ge, the CSRC spokesman, said on Tuesday that the new regulation of share sales by major shareholde­rs will include a predisclos­ure system, selling restrictio­ns and mechanisms such as block trading and private negotiatio­ns to reduce the negative impact on the capital market.

Some analysts earlier estimated that the value of capital involved in share sales by major shareholde­rs of listed companies could amount to 1.2 trillion yuan ($180 billion).

Dong Dengxin, a securities researcher at Wuhan University of Science and Technology, said that overvalued small-cap stocks will be the worst hit if the ban is revoked.

“There is a strong motivation to sell the expensive small-cap stocks as the average price-to-earning ratio of companies listed on the startup board has reached 109 times,” he said.

As of Tuesday afternoon, at least five listed companies have promised that their controllin­g shareholde­rs and senior executives will not reduce their equity holdings.

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