Tag Archives: delisting

Investments could flow back into China as companies avoid U.S. delisting

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba was one of the 100 over companies that had faced the risk of delisting in the U.S. in 2024 if their audit information was not made available to PCAOB inspectors.

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Investors could regain the confidence to put their money in Chinese tech stocks as these companies avoid delisting from U.S. stock exchanges and the Chinese government pledges policy support, according to one investment manager.

Last week, U.S. accounting watchdog the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board said it gained full access to inspect and investigate Chinese companies for the first time, after China finally granted the U.S. access in August.

More than 100 Chinese tech companies such as Alibaba, Baidu and JD.com had faced the risk of delisting in the U.S. in 2024 if their audit information was not made available to PCAOB inspectors.

Investors often grapple with a lack of transparency into Chinese stocks.

“It will allow institutional investors to come back. Professional investors were very scared about this delisting risk which was why they have stayed on the sidelines,” Brendan Ahern, chief investment officer at U.S.-based investment manager KraneShares, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia” on Wednesday.

As of Sept. 30, there were 262 Chinese companies listed on U.S. exchanges with a total market capitalization of $775 billion, according to the United States-China Economic and Security Review Commission.

“With that risk going away based on the PCAOB announcement, you are going to see investment dollars flow back into these names,” said Ahern.

“These internet giants are really where investors want to invest when it comes to China,” said Ahern.

But he also caveated that it is still “early days, weeks, months to see that capital return back into the space.”

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But he also noted policy support will help to boost growth for these companies. Last week, China pledged to raise domestic consumption next year, as the country moves toward boosting growth after exiting its zero-Covid policy.

“2023 is a year where we are going to have a lot of government policy support such as raising domestic consumption,” said Ahern. “About 25% of all retail sales goes through the companies.”

“The Chinese government actually needs these internet companies, which explains why we have seen a backing off on some of the regulatory scrutiny we experienced in 2021,” said Ahern.

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U.S. delisting risk for Chinese ADR stocks halves after deal

The China Securities Regulatory Commission and U.S. Public Company Accounting Oversight Board announced Friday both sides signed an agreement for cooperation on inspecting the audit work papers of U.S.- listed Chinese companies. Pictured here is the CSRC building in Beijing in 2020.

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BEIJING — The risk of Chinese stocks delisting from U.S. exchanges has nearly halved after regulators reached an audit agreement, Goldman Sachs analysts said in a report Monday.

The China Securities Regulatory Commission and U.S. Public Company Accounting Oversight Board announced Friday that both sides signed an agreement for cooperation on inspecting the audit work papers of U.S.- listed Chinese companies. China’s Ministry of Finance also signed the agreement.

“This is no doubt a regulatory breakthrough,” Goldman Sachs’ Kinger Lau and a team said, while cautioning that much uncertainty remains.

They pointed out the PCAOB said the deal was only a first step, while the Chinese side said they would provide “assistance” in the inspections.

The PCAOB said it planned to have inspectors on the ground in China by mid-September, and make a determination in December on whether China was still obstructing access to audit information.

The Goldman Sachs analysts said Monday their model “suggests that the market may be pricing in around 50% probability” that Chinese companies could be delisted from the U.S.

That’s down from 95% in mid-March — the highest on record going back to January 2020.

In late 2020, the U.S. Holding Foreign Companies Accountable Act became law. It allows the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to delist Chinese companies from U.S. exchanges if American regulators cannot review company audits for three consecutive years.

Since March, the SEC has started to call out Alibaba and other specific U.S.-listed Chinese stocks for failing to adhere to the new law.

Outlook for China stocks

If U.S.-listed Chinese stocks, known as American depositary receipts, are forced to delist, the shares could plunge by 13%, the Goldman Sachs analysts estimated.

MSCI China could fall by 6% under such a scenario, the report said. The index’s top holdings are Chinese stocks listed mostly in Hong Kong, such as Tencent and Alibaba.

A “no-delisting” scenario could send ADRs and MSCI China 11% and 5% higher, respectively, the report said.

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Few China-based companies have listed in the U.S. following Beijing’s scrutiny of Chinese ride-hailing company Didi’s IPO in late June 2021. Regulators have since tightened restrictions on Chinese companies — especially those with at least 1 million users — wanting to list overseas.

CSRC’s recent moves

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Alibaba added to SEC’s delisting watchlist, shares fall

July 29 (Reuters) – Alibaba Group Holding Ltd (9988.HK), on Friday became the latest company to be added to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s list of Chinese companies that might be delisted.

Alibaba’s shares were down 11% at $89.37 at the closing bell, ending the month 21.4% lower. The e-commerce giant’s shares were already feeling the pressure after reports suggested Ma was planning to cede control of financial technology firm Ant, an affiliate of Alibaba. read more

Alibaba is among more than 270 Chinese companies listed in New York identified as being at risk of delisting under the Holding Foreign Companies Accountable Act (HFCAA), intended to address a long-running dispute over the auditing compliance of U.S.-listed Chinese firms.

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U.S. regulators have been demanding complete access to audit working papers of New York-listed Chinese companies, which are stored in China.

While Washington and Beijing are in talks over the dispute, KFC operator Yum China Holdings (9987.HK), biotech firm BeiGene Ltd (6160.HK), Weibo Corp and JD.Com are among firms that could face delisting.

Alibaba’s IPO in 2014 was the largest debut in history at that time and paved the way for other Chinese companies seeking fresh capital to list on the U.S. stock exchange.

Founded in 1999 in Jack Ma’s apartment and catering to a large population in China, the e-commerce company has seen the wrath of both U.S. and Chinese regulators amid a broad crackdown, battering its shares since 2020.

It now plans to add a primary listing in Hong Kong, targeting investors in mainland China.

“Applying for the primary listing status in Hong Kong doesn’t necessarily mean they think they’re going to get delisted in the U.S… it’s just to mitigate that potential risk,” said Bo Pei, an analyst with U.S. Tiger Securities.

Others added to the list on Friday include Mogu Inc (MOGU.N), Boqii Holding Limited (BQ.N), Cheetah Mobile Inc and Highway Holdings Limited (HIHO.O).

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Reporting by Nivedita Balu in Bengaluru; Editing by Krishna Chandra Eluri

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Global stocks wobble as Didi delisting revives U.S.-China worries

Passersby wearing protective face masks walk past an electronic board displaying world stock indexes, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Tokyo, Japan November 1, 2021. REUTERS/Issei Kato

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SYDNEY, Dec 3 (Reuters) – Stocks fell on Friday after Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi said it would delist in New York, renewing concern about U.S.-China tensions and tech regulation, while oil headed for a sixth consecutive weekly drop on Omicron and rate hike worries.

S&P 500 futures fell about 0.5%. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng (.HSI) dropped 1.3%, dragged by big tech names. MSCI’s index of Asia shares outside Japan (.MIAPJ0000PUS) fell 0.7%.

The risk-sensitive Australian dollar fell 0.3% and at just below 71 cents is close to a one-year low.

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Didi (DIDI.N) ran afoul of Chinese regulators by pushing ahead with its $4.4 billion U.S. IPO in July and said on Weibo it was looking to move its listing to Hong Kong. read more

“Delistings starting to happen gives some jitters over the uncertainty as to how this impacts on the broader U.S.-China picture,” said Bank of Singapore analyst Moh Siong Sim.

The news about Didi comes a day after Singapore-based ride-hailing and delivery firm Grab (GRAB.O) slid more than 20% on its Nasdaq debut. The listing is the biggest on Wall Street by a Southeast Asian firm. read more

More broadly markets have lurched around on little hard news about Omicron this week, driving the CBOE volatility index (.VIX) toward its biggest one-week leap since the pandemic chaos of February 2020. Short-term yields have also jumped as investors bet on higher rates, even with the Omicron uncertainty.

Traders will need to wait at least another week or so for an early read on the variant’s virulence or vaccine resistance. U.S. labour data due later on Friday is also in focus as a guide to rates.

Benchmark brent crude futures finished higher overnight at $69.67 a barrel, but have dropped more than 3% this week and are down more than 18% from October’s three-year high.

So far, in the absence of Omicron details some governments have scrambled to shut borders anyway. But other policymakers – most notably the Federal Reserve – are cautiously proceeding apace with plans to move away from crisis-mode responses.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell said central bankers will talk about a faster pullback to bond buying at this month’s meeting and stop describing inflation as transitory. Oil cartel OPEC is going ahead with planned production increases. read more

“The Fed is not ignoring the threat from Omicron, but are choosing not to let it delay policy responses that suggest a more business as usual outlook,” said Commonwealth Bank of Australia strategist Tobin Gorey.

“OPEC+ has done a similar thing,” he added. “Neither has iced their planned policy changes…and both are perhaps examples that suggest lockdown responses to epidemic surges are becoming less likely.”

The bond market’s response to Powell’s hawkish shift has been to jack up short term rates and push down long ones, reckoning that sooner hikes will end up curbing future inflation and growth, and sharply flattening the U.S. yield curve.

Two-year Treasury yields were steady in early Asia trade for a weekly gain of nearly 10 basis points.

Benchmark 10-year Treasury yields , on the other hand, have dropped nearly 6 bps to 1.4291% this week and 30-year yields are down 7.3 bps to 1.7545%.

“It’s inflation, not growth, which is making the Fed accelerate tightening plans,” said Kit Juckes, a strategist at Societe Generale in London.

“For the first time in ages, the risk to this U.S. economic cycle is that it comes to an end sooner than consensus forecasts expect,” he said, forecasting that the U.S. dollar’s upward momentum could slow into a peak around the middle of next year.

Investors sold riskier currencies on Friday. The risk-sensitive Australian and New Zealand dollars lost about 0.3% each. The euro was steady at $1.1298 and the yen firm at 113.08 per dollar.

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Reporting by Tom Westbrook; Editing by Sam Holmes

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Chinese tech stocks fall as U.S. SEC begins law aimed at delisting

A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) after the opening bell of the trading session in New York, U.S., March 13, 2020.

Lucas Jackson | Reuters

GUANGZHOU, China — Major dual-listed Chinese technology shares trading in Hong Kong were hammered on Thursday amid fears that some companies could be de-listed in the U.S.

Hong Kong shares of U.S.-listed Chinese tech stocks fell sharply. Alibaba was down over 4% at 1:04 p.m. Hong Kong time, Baidu tanked over 8%, JD.com fell over 4% and NetEase was nearly 3% lower.

It comes one day after the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) adopted a law called the Holding Foreign Companies Accountable Act, which was passed by the administration of former President Donald Trump.

Certain companies identified by the SEC will require auditing by a U.S. watchdog. These companies will be required to submit certain documents to establish that they are not owned or controlled by a governmental entity in a foreign jurisdiction.

Chinese companies will have to name each board member who is a Chinese Communist Party official, the SEC said Wednesday.

The U.S. regulator could stop the trading of securities that fall foul of its rules.

Chinese technology companies are not only under pressure from the delisting threat abroad, but also concerns over a stricter regulations at home. Beijing has looked to reign in the power of technology giants and establish new rules in areas from financial technology to e-commerce.

While the Chinese government’s crackdown started with billionaire Jack Ma’s empire, including the suspension of the mega initial public offering of Ant Group, there are signs that Beijing’s targets could extend beyond Ant.

Reuters reported this week that Tencent founder Pony Ma met with Chinese antitrust officials this month. Tencent is only listed in Hong Kong and its shares were more than 2% lower at around 1:17 p.m. Hong Kong time.

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