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China Securities Watchdog Seeks Closer Cooperation with US Amid IPO Woes


Xpeng's China EV sales fared better than rivals Li Auto and Nio
An XPeng Inc. P7 performance electric vehicle is seen outside the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) ahead of the Chinese company's IPO trading under the stock symbol "XPEV" in New York, August 27, 2020. Photo: Reuters

 

  • China will ‘uphold the spirit of mutual respect’ in communication
  • Move comes after US tightened disclosure rules for Chinese listings

 

China’s securities regulator said on Sunday it will seek closer cooperation with its US counterpart and will support overseas listings after US regulators tightened disclosure for Chinese companies and voiced concern about Beijing’s regulatory actions.

The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) said in a statement that it had taken note of the US Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) new requirements for disclosure regarding Chinese companies’ listings and that the two sides should “uphold the spirit of mutual respect” and “strengthen communications on regulating China-related stocks”.

The CSRC has always been open to companies choosing where to go public and “China’s basic national policy of advancing reform and opening up is unswerving, and the financial opening to the outside world will continue”, it said on its website.

 

Future Uncertainty

The SEC said on Friday it would require Chinese companies to disclose “uncertainty about future actions by the government of China that could significantly affect the operating company’s financial performance,” before allowing them to raise capital through US stock markets.

Chinese issuers must also disclose if they were denied permission from Chinese authorities to list on US. exchanges and the risks that such approval could be denied or rescinded, the SEC added.

China has been tightening its regulatory grip on overseas share issuance after it launched a cybersecurity probe of ride-hailing giant Didi Global Inc last month, just days after its listing in New York.

China’s cabinet said on July 6 that it would strengthen supervision of all Chinese firms listed offshore.

Following suit, China’s cyberspace regulator said that any company with data for more than 1 million users must report for a cybersecurity review before seeking overseas listings. China’s central bank has also said that non-bank payment firms must report plans for overseas listings.

Reuters

 

Also on AF: US Regulator Clamps Down on Chinese IPOs Over Risk Disclosures

 

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