Chinese Company IPOs on US Exchanges Hit 10-Year High in 2020
February 25, 2021
The number of Chinese companies selling stock shares on American
exchanges hit a 10-year high in 2020, despite the rising U.S.-China
tensions and the threat by Washington to delist companies that do not
meet American accounting standards.
A total of 32 China-based firms came to the United States to go public
for the first time, the most since 2011, according to a study by the
University of Florida.
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An estimated $12.1 billion was raised by the companies through initial
public offerings (IPOs), the highest amount since 2014 when Alibaba set
the largest IPO record with its New York Stock Exchange debut.
"In spite of the talk, including congressional action about delisting
Chinese companies, Chinese companies continue to go public in the United
States. The last year was pretty active and this year continues to be
the case as well." Jay Ritter, a finance professor at the University of
Florida, and author of the report, said in a telephone interview with
VOA.
The U.S. holdings of Chinese securities neared $1.2 trillion by the end
of 2020, according to a separate study by the Rhodium Group. "U.S.
markets have been critical to Chinese company fundraising," the report
says.
Gary Dvorchak, managing director of Blueshirt, a financial consulting
firm, said by email that for Chinese companies, listing in the United
States can give them access to a larger number of investors, which can
result in a higher valuation.
"For instance, there is a large and knowledgeable set of biotech
investors in the U.S. markets, so biotech companies are likely to find
investors that understand their business and the potential, and thus be
willing to value them accordingly." said Dvorchak, who lives in Beijing
and advises Chinese companies interested in listing on American
exchanges.
Risks and returns
While there are more than 200 Chinese companies listed in the U.S. stock
markets with upwards of $2 trillion market capitalization, American
regulators have never been allowed to scrutinize their books.
China-based Issuers have the same disclosure obligations and legal
responsibilities as other non-U.S. issuers. However, the companies have
long refused to share paperwork for auditing by the U.S. auditing
watchdog, known as the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB),
because they say that doing so would violate Chinese secrecy laws.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), an U.S. independent
agency with the responsibility to protect investors, issued a warning
last year that the Commission “may be materially limited” in its ability
to enforce high-quality disclosure standards for China-based companies.
"As a result, there is substantially greater risk that their disclosures
may be incomplete or misleading," the SEC said in a statement.
In April last year, Chinese coffee chain Luckin Coffee, which inside
China is seen as a competitor to Starbucks, admitted that it fabricated
at least $310 million of its sales over a period of three quarters.
By mid-June, the company's value had plunged more than 90%, and a total
of more than $11 billion of market value was erased. The company
eventually was delisted from Nasdaq.
While the risks for investors can be high, so can the returns. Brendan
Ahern, chief investment officer at Krane Funds Advisors LLC, which runs
several China-focused funds in the U.S., said Chinese companies in
general have provided tremendous results for U.S. investors.
"If you could go back 20 years and ask, what stock would you own?
Virtually every investor would say I would buy Amazon. But the reality
is NTES [NetEase, a leading Chinese Internet technology company], which
went public in June of 2000, has actually provided twice the performance
of Amazon. It has returned 18,000%, over the last 21 years versus
Amazon's 8,700% return."
Growing US pressure
To address the long-running frustration of U.S. auditors, Congress
passed a law last year with strong bipartisan support that could force
Chinese firms to delist their stocks from American exchanges. The
Holding Foreign Companies Accountable Act (HFCA), which was later signed
by former President Donald Trump, prohibits securities of a company from
being listed on any of the U.S. securities exchanges if the company has
failed to comply with PCAOB audits for three years in a row.
The law also addressed issues related to national security. It requires
public companies to disclose whether they are owned or controlled by a
foreign government, including China’s communist government. Some experts
argue that would include virtually all the Chinese companies.
Former President Trump also issued an executive order last November
barring U.S. investors from buying securities of alleged Chinese
military-controlled companies. As a result, three Chinese
telecommunication giants, China Mobile Ltd, China Telecom Corp Ltd and
China Unicom Hong Kong Ltd, were removed early this year.
It
is now up to the SEC and Biden administration to interpret HFCA. With
trillions of dollars at stake and economy still weak, experts doubt the
U.S. will ban all Chinese companies from listing in the U.S.
There was as much as $3.3 trillion in U.S.-China two-way equity and bond
holdings at the end of 2020, according to Rhodium.
"If you took a very strict interpretation that almost all Chinese
companies would have some involvement with the Chinese government that
could be viewed negatively," George Calhoun, a business professor at the
Stevens Institute of Technology and Advisory Board Member at Hanlon
Investment Management, said in an email. "But I don't think that's the
way the law will end up being interpreted."
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