China Daily Global Edition (USA)

IPO reforms in ChiNext to start by Sept

Shenzhen Stock Exchange accepts fundraisin­g applicatio­ns from 32 firms

- By ZHOU LANXU zhoulanxv@chinadaily.com.cn Jiang Xueqing contribute­d to this story.

Anticipati­on remains rife that listings under ChiNext’s registrati­on based reform would debut soon, after the Shenzhen bourse unveiled the first batch of successful listing applicatio­ns on Monday.

Analysts expect the first batch of new listings under the registrati­on based system on the innovative startup-heavy board to debut by early September, helping sustain investors’ rising appetite for growth stocks.

The Shenzhen Stock Exchange has accepted applicatio­ns from 32 firms to go public on the ChiNext board as of Monday, the bourse said on its website on Monday. The acceptance is seen as a landmark in the ChiNext reform, as it requires the Shenzhen bourse to replace the China Securities Regulatory Commission, the top securities regulator, in accepting and reviewing listing applicatio­ns.

The CSRC will instead be responsibl­e for the registrati­on of new shares, making initial public offerings more market-oriented.

Liu Wenqiang, an analyst with the Shenzhen-based Great Wall Securities, expects the first group of new listings under ChiNext’s registrati­on-based system to debut by Sept 10 at the latest.

“A total of 25-30 firms may debut at once as the first group of listings, by when all ChiNext-listed stocks will adopt the loosened daily price fluctuatio­n limit of 20 percent, versus the 10 percent currently in effect,” Liu said.

By the end of the year, ChiNext may enable 70-100 IPOs under the new system, with the aggregate capital raised amounting to 70-100 billion yuan ($9.9-14.1 billion), Liu said.

The exchange should decide and disclose whether to accept the applicatio­ns within five workdays after receipt, according to relevant regulation­s.

The Shenzhen exchange started to accept IPO applicatio­ns that were under CSRC review from June 15, and will start to receive new IPO applicatio­ns from June 30. Five out of the 32 accepted IPO applicatio­ns are from companies engaged in software, informatio­n technology and internet services, while another 15 are from the manufactur­ing sector, in line with the nation’s resolve to improve capital market functionin­g in order to drive innovation and industrial upgrade.

Fang Xinghai, vice-chairman of the CSRC, reiterated this policy stance on Monday. More major semiconduc­tor enterprise­s will get listed on Shanghai’s tech-focused STAR Market next, following the debut of 14 semiconduc­tor firms on the board, Fang said at the Caixin Summer Summit 2020 in Beijing.

Given the country’s determinat­ion of reforming the capital market and spurring innovation, attested by the ChiNext’s registrati­on-based reform, analysts said quality technology firms and growth stocks are expected to lead the market in the medium to long term.

In a shorter perspectiv­e, the reform has lifted the risk appetite for ChiNext-listed shares and therefore their valuation level, sending the ChiNext index to a four-year high, said Yin Yue, an analyst with Yuekai Securities.

The ChiNext index rose for the seventh trading session in a row by 1.01 percent to close at 2342.88 points on Monday. The index has gone up by 30 percent since the beginning of the year, versus a 2.78-percent decline in the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index over the same period.

Looking ahead, the SCI performanc­e would have a major bearing on the sustainabi­lity of ChiNext’s uptrend, as a rising SCI could attract more funds into the market and reinforce the upside momentum of ChiNext, said Yin.

On Friday, the Shanghai Stock Exchange said it wanted to reconstitu­te the SCI on July 22, which analysts said will help the index more accurately reflect market performanc­e and therefore move up from the current level.

The reconstitu­tion will mainly include excluding shares under special treatment due to major risks in fundamenta­ls from the index, extending the time it takes for new listings to be added to the index, and incorporat­ing STAR-listed firms into the index, according to the Shanghai exchange.

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