IPOs suspended for new pricing rule By Sun Min (China Daily) Updated: 2004-09-01 00:00
China will temporarily suspend initial public offerings until it formulates
new rules to price IPOs.
The China Securities Regulatory Commission released a draft of the new IPO
pricing regulation on its website late on Monday, introducing more market-driven
practices and transparency in the flotation process.
It said that to ensure fairness, no additional IPOs would be allowed before
the new regulation was formally enacted. But that would not affect additional
share issues.
At the moment, the document is still in the consultation period. It is
estimated that it might take at least several weeks to enact the regulation
after necessary amendments.
The news triggered a rally of the bourses Tuesday. The Shanghai composite
index rose 1.72 per cent to close at 1,342.06, reversing its downward track over
past sessions.
The temporary suspension of IPOs does have a generally enhancing effect on
the market, since it relieves pressure on market expansion in the near term,
said Dong Chen, a China Securities Co analyst.
But it is only a short-term impact, with new share issues resuming once the
IPO rule is finalized and a number of enterprises still lined up to become
listed.
So in the long run, the reforms of the IPO pricing system itself is more
meaningful to investors, Dong said.
According to the draft, companies launching IPOs will have to make inquiries
regarding share prices among institutional investors like fund managers,
qualified foreign institutional investors and securities firms.
Stock issuers and sponsors should also provide relevant reports on the
evaluation of the prices to these institutions.
The final IPO price ranges will be decided on the basis of the inquiries.
In the past, such price inquiries were not required. And often times new
share issues were over-priced, while secondary market investors did not have
much influence to change prices.
But with such new arrangements, which is introduced from overseas markets,
institutional investors will have more say in the pricing process and IPO prices
will be more reasonable and more favourable to investors, Dong explained.
The new rule will also amend the traditional way of calculating earnings per
share and is expected to present more factual figures to investors.
These changes will exert more pressure on the listing companies and sponsors,
and will provide better protection to investors' interests, and make IPO prices
better reflect the real value of the listing firms and market demand, a
commission spokesman said.
"Some companies are apt to take the stock market as an automatic teller
machine and that is unfair to investors," said Dong.
But in the future, it will be harder for them to do so. And the pricing
system will give investors more power on whether to accept an IPO or not, which
will block out the bad ones from the very start.
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