Read more: Could Beijing’s probe of Didi’s data security stymie consumer spending? Chinese authorities also announced on Tuesday that rules for overseas listings will be revised and regulatory oversight of companies trading in offshore markets stepped up. The gathering regulatory clampdown has led investors to shun Chinese stocks in the US. The Nasdaq Golden Dragon China Index, which tracks 98 Chinese companies listed in the US, has fallen 7.9% since the first salvo by the cyberspace agency. The S&P500 Index has risen 0.9% during the same time frame. ![]() LinkdDoc, which was founded in 2014, filed for the IPO last month. On Wednesday, it updated its sale prospectus, flagging risks from Beijing’s new directive about overseas IPOs. Uncertainties exist on how soon “legislative or administrative regulation-making bodies will respond and what existing or new laws or regulations or detailed implementations and interpretations will be modified or promulgated,” it said. The company, which provides cancer-focused health care services by relying on big data and artificial intelligence, had planned to sell 10.8 million shares priced between USD 17.50 and USD 19.50 each. Thirty-six Chinese companies have held IPOs in the US this year, raising a total of USD 12.6 billion, according to Dealogic. This marks the fastest start to a year ever recorded by the data provider and compares with six listings that raised USD 2.8 billion in the same period last year.Īnalysts and bankers now expect US IPOs by mainland companies to slump, at least in the short term. Some 16 companies, including Alibaba-backed Chinese media and data cloud service platform Qiniu, housekeeping services company Daojia, and ForU Worldwide, a digital freight transportation company, were looking to raise over USD 4 billion, people familiar with the transactions said.īeijing has reportedly pressured podcast platform Ximalaya to halt plans to list in the US in favor of Hong Kong due to data security concerns. The issue is also likely to be factored into keenly watched plans by ByteDance to list some or all of its businesses, such as TikTok. ![]() This article first appeared on Nikkei Asia. It’s republished here as part of 36Kr’s ongoing partnership with Nikkei. HONG KONG (BLOOMBERG) – Just months after bankers celebrated a record haul from taking Chinese companies public in New York and Hong Kong, they’ve had a rude awakening. Deals are being shelved and investors are nursing heavy losses.Ī chill has settled over global finance after a fortnight in which China first cracked down on its Uber-like Didi Global Inc. Trading debut, followed swiftly by the State Council announcing closer scrutiny of all offshore listings.
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