Delisting surges in China as Beijing adopts ‘survival of the fittest’ approach

FAN Editor
An investor looks at a stock quotation board at a brokerage office in Beijing
FILE PHOTO: An investor looks at a stock quotation board at a brokerage office in Beijing, China January 3, 2020. REUTERS/Jason Lee

July 15, 2020

SHANGHAI (Reuters) – Having begun delisting 26 companies so far this year, China’s securities regulator is set to remove a record number of firms from the stock exchange, heeding a message from Vice Premier Liu He to ensure the “survival of the fittest”.

Liu reinforced the urgency to weed out bad companies from the stock market at a meeting of the State Council on Saturday, heralding a change in approach for the regulator, which had only delisted 110 companies between 2001 and 2018.

China has introduced a U.S.-style system to make listing easier for Shenzhen’s start-up board ChiNext. The system was first adopted by Shanghai’s tech-focused STAR Market.

“If you widen the entrance, you need to widen the exit too,” said Tang Zhehui, partner of accounting firm EY, commenting on the need to streamline delisting too.

The change should also improve China’s investment culture, as in the past speculators would buy up moribund listed companies in the expectation that they would be saved by white knights and never be delisted, he added.

Among the 26 companies that Refinitiv data shows are in the process of being delisted are former high performers like Leshi <300104.SZ>, an Internet information service business, as well as some fraudulent ones.

“Some listed companies deteriorate due to changes in economic environment or mismanagement,” said Zizheng Wang, Shanghai-based portfolio manager at UBS Asset Management.

“If you eliminate them, the market would evolve, and become healthier.”

Terence Lin, senior partner at Shanghai-based boutique investment bank TRSD Capital, said China’s regulator had been far less rigorous than its U.S. counterpart.

“In the U.S., if you forge books, or fail to submit filings, you will be kicked out. Rules are very tough,” Lin said.

“But in China, a lot of such companies remain listed, and many, many retail investors become victims.”

That could change, as Chinese regulators strengthen delisting rules.

In a major move targeting so-called “garbage” companies, the Shanghai Stock Exchange will remove “special treatment” (ST) shares from its stock benchmark next week. A stock is labeled “ST” after regulators flag that it was at risk of being delisted or involved “investment risks”.

(Reporting by Samuel Shen and Andrew Galbraith; additional reporting by Luoyan Liu; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)

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