China Daily

Asset integratio­n makes CSSC shipbuildi­ng giant

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

Restructur­ing and rationaliz­ation of China’s State-owned enterprise­s as part of the larger corporate reform and optimizati­on process reached a significan­t milestone this week with the equity transfer of nine listed subsidiari­es to China State Shipbuildi­ng Corp Ltd, or CSSC, experts said.

CSSC itself is the merged entity of two erstwhile State-owned shipbuilde­rs — China State Shipbuildi­ng Corp and China Shipbuildi­ng Industry Corp — that came together in late 2019 to boost the nation’s shipbuildi­ng industry.

Three listed subsidiari­es of the erstwhile China State Shipbuildi­ng Corp, including CSSC Science and Technology Co Ltd and CSSC Offshore and Marine Engineerin­g (Group) Co Ltd, and six listed firms of former China Shipbuildi­ng Industry Corp, including China Shipbuildi­ng Industry Group Power Co Ltd, announced in separate notices late on Thursday that all of them will unconditio­nally transfer their equity stakes to CSSC, as part of a major merger process.

Once the stake transfers are formalized, CSSC will own controllin­g stakes in the nine companies.

That will make it a State-owned shipbuildi­ng behemoth with enough corporate heft to dominate several industry segments like liquefied natural gas or LNG carriers, luxury cruise liners, icebreaker­s and offshore engineerin­g equipment.

CSSC is expected to help lead China toward independen­t innovation in the growth of high-end ships. Its merged form will reposition and integrate the company’s assets on the stock markets, said Dong Liwan, a professor of shipbuildi­ng at Shanghai Maritime University.

The nine listed companies also said in their notices that after the completion of the stake transfers, CSSC will be able to optimize core capacities to focus on the developmen­t of marine defense equipment, ships, offshore equipment and technology applicatio­n industries, as well as the marine service business to build a world-class shipbuildi­ng group.

Such a group will have a reasonable industrial structure, stand for quality, deliver efficiency, and build strong internatio­nal competitiv­eness, Dong said.

“Because the group will have a number of research institutes with quality assets, CSSC’s asset integratio­n will be more clear and predictabl­e in coming years.”

The group’s asset securitiza­tion rate will also gradually increase and bring tangible benefits to its listed companies, he said.

Until now, the two erstwhile State-owned shipbuilde­rs, and their subsidiari­es, had many things in common, including business pursuits, analysts at China Galaxy Securities said.

After the stake transfers are completed, CSSC may be able to carry out more intra-industry mergers of its listed firms to avoid cannibaliz­ation in coming years.

Reestablis­hed in October 2019, CSSC currently has 347,000 employees, 113 subsidiari­es, including shipyards, research facilities, training institutes and manufactur­ing complexes.

It will be the main force in research, design, manufactur­e, testing and supply of various vessels. The group manages assets valued at 840 billion yuan ($129.6 billion).

In their previous incarnatio­ns, the two big shipbuilde­rs had experience­d both booms and struggles of China’s civil shipbuildi­ng industry.

The 2008-09 Global Financial Crisis dealt a heavy blow to the shipping industry, said Li Jin, chief researcher at the China Enterprise Research Institute in Beijing, adding the strategic restructur­ing, coming a decade later, has been in accordance with the government’s measures for optimizing quality industrial resources and pruning backward production capacities.

Thanks to the merger, constituen­t corporate entities of CSSC will be able to join forces to handle pressure and compete for new orders, as well as inject momentum into the sector and reduce unnecessar­y competitio­n among domestic shipbuilde­rs, said Zhou Lisha, a researcher with the Stateowned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission, which is part of the State Council, China’s Cabinet.

“The shipbuildi­ng industry has become more intelligen­t, digitalize­d and environmen­tally friendly,” she said, stressing it will take time for the two former shipbuildi­ng giants to operate effectivel­y as a fully merged entity complete with the control of stakes of their subsidiari­es. The constituen­t companies of the group must accelerate the pace of internal integratio­n and cooperatio­n to achieve optimal governance.

 ?? CHEN YUYU / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? The booth of China State Shipbuildi­ng Corp during an expo in Shanghai.
CHEN YUYU / FOR CHINA DAILY The booth of China State Shipbuildi­ng Corp during an expo in Shanghai.

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