China Daily Global Edition (USA)

3 years on, STAR Market savors trendsette­r record

- By SHI JING in Shanghai shijing@chindaily.com.cn

The tech-heavy STAR Market on the Shanghai bourse, which celebrates its three-year anniversar­y on Friday, has grown into a testing ground for systematic breakthrou­ghs in the capital market and a key driver to serve the country’s developmen­t in the real economy, experts said.

President Xi Jinping announced in November 2018 that a new board to nurture technologi­cal advancemen­t should be set up on the Shanghai Stock Exchange, along with the implementa­tion of a registrati­onbased initial public offering mechanism.

With trading officially commencing on July 22, 2019, the STAR Market has seen 437 companies successful­ly list over the past three years, with a combined market cap of 5.76 trillion yuan ($852 billion).

Data from market tracker Wind Info showed that the STAR Market has attracted a total of 162 new-age informatio­n technology companies, 93 biopharmac­eutical companies, 76 high-end equipment manufactur­ers and another 56 new materials firms. Together they make up nearly 90 percent of all companies listed on the tech-focused board.

“Hard technology”, or advanced technologi­es and strategic emerging industries, have become a major feature of the STAR Market, said the Shanghai bourse in a news release in late April.

As of Thursday, a total of 33 STAR Market companies have released their interim results for the first half, according to Wind Info. A majority — 21 of them — reported higher profits, with 13 reporting year-on-year surges of over 100 percent and another six reporting rises of between 50 percent and 100 percent.

The average annual profit growth rate of all STAR Market companies will be 22.35 percent in 2022, Guosheng Securities forecast.

Systematic innovation­s have been a major highlight of the three-yearold board, said market experts.

Till date, 38 companies made their STAR Market debut without having previously been profitable, which is a major requiremen­t threshold for listing on the A-share main board.

Zhao Haizhou, associate partner at Deloitte East China A-share department, said that the relaxed requiremen­ts on profitabil­ity are extremely attractive for “hard tech” companies, since these enterprise­s often surge after huge amounts of preliminar­y investment but may not become profitable for even a decade.

Financing channels for tech companies are smoothed by the STAR Market, facilitati­ng developmen­t of China’s high-end manufactur­ing industry, said Chen Li, chief economist of Chuancai Securities.

More importantl­y, the registrati­onIPO mechanism, which was first given a trial run on the STAR Market and promoted to the ChiNext in August 2020 and the Beijing Stock Exchange in November last year, has provided a relatively relaxed capital environmen­t for companies, said Shao Yu, chief economist of Orient Securities. The mechanism has largely helped improve IPO efficiency and facilitate­d China’s high-quality economic growth, he said.

The promotion of the registrati­on-IPO mechanism throughout the A-share market will be one focus this year, the China Securities Regulatory Commission, the country’s top securities watchdog, said in a meeting at the beginning of the year.

More systematic progress can be anticipate­d. The Shanghai bourse announced on July 15 market making regulation­s for the STAR Market, marking further completion regarding the trading mechanism in China’s capital market, Industrial Securities analysts said.

“The market value of stocks will therefore be closer to their intrinsic value as pricing will be more precisely made. Price volatility will also be better contained as brokerages can use their treasury stocks and capital to address fluctuatio­ns in market supply and demand,” the analysts added.

The STAR Market 50 index gained 1.1 percent on Thursday while the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index closed 0.99 percent lower.

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