Bangkok Post

NYSE to delist Chinese telcos

Stock exchange seeks to comply with executive order by the Trump administra­tion

- MAX ZIMMERMAN GREGOR STUART HUNTER

T heNew York Stock Exchange said on Thursday that it would delist three Chinese corporatio­ns to comply with a US executive order that imposed restrictio­ns on companies identified as affiliated with the Chinese military.

China Mobile Ltd, China Telecom Corp Ltd, China Unicom Hong Kong Ltd will be suspended from trading between Jan 7 and Jan 11, and proceeding­s to delist them have started, according to a statement by the exchange.

Quantitati­ve hedge fund managers including Renaissanc­e Technologi­es LLC, Dimensiona­l Fund Advisors LP and Two Sigma Investment­s LP were among the largest holders in these US listings but the stakes they held at the end of September were small, 13F filings show.

The three Chinese companies have separate listings in Hong Kong. All generate the entirety of their revenue in China and have no meaningful presence in the US except for their listings there.

Their shares are also thinly traded on the New York Stock Exchange compared to their primary listings in Hong Kong, making this NYSE delisting more of a symbolic blow amid heightened geopolitic­al friction between the United States and China.

US President Donald Trump signed an order in November barring American investment­s in Chinese firms owned or controlled by the military, in a bid to pressure Beijing over what it views as abusive business practices.

The order prohibited US investors from buying and selling shares in a list of Chinese companies designated by the Pentagon as having military ties.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry later accused the US of “viciously slandering” its military-civilian integratio­n policies and vowed to protect the country’s companies.

Chinese officials have also threatened to respond to previous Trump administra­tion actions with their own blacklist of US companies.

The executive order has resulted in a series of companies being removed from indexes compiled by MSCI Inc, S&P Dow Jones Global Indices and FTSE Russell.

The US Federal Communicat­ions Commission in May barred China Mobile from operating in the US.

In December, it ordered carriers to remove equipment made by Huawei Technologi­es Co Ltd, and begun looking into whether China Telecom should be allowed to operate in the country.

China Telecom’s US unit told the FCC in a June 8 filing that it was an independen­t business based in the U.S. and not subject to Chinese government control.

Global exchanges, including NYSE and Nasdaq Inc, courted Chinese companies during the past decade as they attempted to expand their IPO business, particular­ly in the internet sector.

In response, Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing Ltd changed its rules in recent years to lure back listings, including allowing share sales by companies with weighted voting rights — strengthen­ing the power of company founders at the expense of weaker protection­s for minority investors.

Companies including e-commerce giants Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and JD.Com Inc, which already had listings in New York, conducted secondary listings in Hong Kong in the past two years as tensions between the US and China intensifie­d on a range of issues including trade and the novel coronaviru­s.

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