As long as it continues with reforms, China’s capital market will see spring
By Li
Daokui, Like Aobo and Mei Jinghua
Yi
Huiman, chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), said
during a recent event that the commission will attract more high-quality
companies to go public and will explore ways to delist “zombie” and “empty-shell”
companies. Yi’s remarks come in a timely manner, not only injecting confidence
into the A-share market under the impact of the US-China trade war but also
offering an olive branch to high-quality companies that haven't gone public in
the A-share market, including those that have already been listed overseas. The
Chinese economy has entered a stage of high-quality development, with the
financial sector also undergoing supply-side structural reforms. Given the
crucial role of the capital market in both high-quality development and structural
reforms, enhancing the quality of listed companies is key.
Why does
China’s stock market lag obviously behind the Chinese economy in terms of
development? Fundamentally speaking, the quality of stock market assets fails
to reflect the development level of the Chinese economy. If the strongest
football players cannot get into the national team, then the national team will
not perform well. In general, China’s stock market hasn’t fully reflected the
new changes and new trends of the Chinese economy in terms of structure and
momentum, one of the important reasons for the poor performance of the market.
Comparing the top 10 listed companies in China and the US, we can find that
more than half of the US-listed companies are internet technology companies represented
by Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Google and Facebook, while most of the
mainland-listed companies are those from traditional industries, like the four
big banks and two energy giants, which is not completely consistent with China’s
economic performance over the years.
In fact,
over past decades, a large number of high-quality Chinese companies with good
development prospects, high profitability and strong innovation impetus have
chosen to go public overseas for various reasons. They include internet technology
companies like Alibaba, Tencent, and JD.com, automobile brands like Geely and
Great Wall Motors, and real estate giants like Evergrande and Country Garden.
Their overseas listings deprived domestic investors of opportunities to share
the development dividends of China’s best companies, also objectively
underlining the insufficient efficiency and capability of China’s capital
market in serving the real economy. Meanwhile, there are still a large number
of low-quality and low-efficiency companies in the A-share market, which have
no growth value and cannot play the leading role for their industries. These
companies have not only occupied resources such as funds and listing quotas but
have also distorted the valuation and pricing system of the capital market,
thus inhibiting the vitality and resilience of the Chinese stock market. In
this sense, supply-side structural reforms are very important and necessary,
even urgent, for the Chinese stock market.
Thankfully,
China’s capital market has already begun the reform process, with incremental
reforms like the establishment of the science and technology innovation board
and the pilot registration-based listing system. Since the size of such
incremental reforms will be limited in the early stage, stock reforms involving
the quality improvement of the 3,600-some listed companies seem more critical.
An
A-share market that is aligned with quality economic growth should allow for
both listing and delisting, an indication of capital market metabolism. Firms
listed in the market need to be ones that lead industry development and boast
considerable benefits. An A-share market as such will be a source of running
water rather than a pool of stagnant water.
For this
reason, it is suggested that efforts to “vacate the cage for new birds” in the
A-share market should be made at an accelerated pace. This means making
institutional improvements and creating conditions for fast-growing “seedling”
companies such as unicorns to be “intercepted” at the domestic market. Actions
should also be in place to innovate boldly and be keen on reforms, attracting
premium overseas-listed firms back to the A-share market. Meanwhile, the
regulatory authorities ought to strictly eliminate low-efficiency, ineffective
listed firms and improve and firmly implement the delisting rules.
Over the
course of delisting firms of low quality, the authorities should push for the
revitalization of shell companies, increase shell supplies, and provide support
to premium firms seeking an IPO via buying shells, acquiring or merging into
low-quality listed firms, among other means. Such reformist drives will force
existing listed firms to always be prepared for the unexpected and to stay
pressured to improve corporate governance and earnings. This, adding to newly
listed premium firms in the market, will naturally result in higher quality
listed firms as a whole.
An
improvement in the quality of listed firms will surely help in creating a
vibrant and resilient capital market, preventing and handling varied risks
facing the capital market, and turning China’s stock market into a genuine
barometer of the real economy.
So long
as the nation preserves with reforms, its capital market, whose performance has
long baffled domestic investors, will certainly embrace a beautiful spring.
Li Daokui is director of the
Academic Center for the Chinese Economic Practices and Thinking (ACCEPT) at
Tsinghua University, Like Aobo is deputy director of the ACCEPT, and Mei
Jinghua is a research fellow with the ACCEPT. bizopinion@globaltimes.com.cn
Source:Global Times
2019 “Belt and Road” Dieshiqiao
Import and Export Commodities Fair opened in Haimen, Jiangsu Province. (Photo
by Xu Congjun from People’s Daily Online)
As long as it continues with reforms, China’s capital market will see spring
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