Business World

CICC, China Investment Securities said to be in talks for possible merger

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INVESTMENT BANK China Internatio­nal Capital Corp. (CICC) and brokerage China Investment Securities Co., firms with 186 billion yuan ($28 billion) of assets last year, are in talks on a possible merger, people familiar with the matter said.

A transactio­n is not certain, and the structure of any deal is yet to be decided, the people said, asking not to be identified because the talks are private.

Linking up could be “a good deal for CICC,” said Lucas Wang, a Hong Kong- based analyst at First Shanghai Securities Ltd. “CICC’s strength has been with high net worth individual­s and corporate clients; the network and mass-market client base of China Investment Securities will be a good fit.”

Set up in 1995, Beijing- based CICC was part-owned by Morgan Stanley until that firm sold out in 2010.

Run by Levin Zhu, the son of then-Premier Zhu Rongji, it brought some of the country’s biggest state-owned firms to market, becoming known as China’s answer to Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.

As part of CICC’s efforts to drive a revival, it raised $811 million from an initial public offering in Hong Kong in November, earmarking money for expansions in equity sales and trading, wealth management and internatio­nal business. During last year, surging income from brokerage commission­s and asset management helped to drive up profit.

The company that CICC may combine with, Shenzhen-based China Investment Securities, sat at No. 17 in the revenue rankings for last year, where Citic Securities Co. was No. 1, according to Securities Associatio­n of China data.

China Investment Securities is 100% owned by Central Huijin Investment Ltd., according to the brokerage’s Web site. Huijin, a unit of China’s sovereign wealth fund, owns 28.4 % of CICC, according to CICC’s Web site.

HUIJIN’S REVAMPS

A deal would follow previous revamps of brokerages controlled by Huijin. Shenyin & Wanguo Securities Co. and Hong Yuan Securities Co. were combined in a $6.4-billion deal struck in 2014, creating one of the nation’s biggest brokers, Shenwan Hongyuan Group Co. Another broker controlled by Huijin, China Galaxy Securities Co., was listed in 2013.

Sherry Tan, a spokeswoma­n for CICC in Beijing, declined to comment.

There was no immediate response to an e-mail sent to the Beijing-based press office of Central Huijin’s parent, China Investment Corp., and no one answered a call to China Investment Securities seeking comment.

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