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Shenzhen bourse nudges China firms to speed up IPO applications

Shenzhen bourse nudges China firms to speed up IPO applications

Business Times10 hours ago
[BEIJING] China's Shenzhen Stock Exchange has urged brokers to speed up applications for companies to list on the ChiNext board as officials seek to boost private enterprise and reignite the economy under threat from rising tariffs.
The exchange, China's second largest after Shanghai, called in a dozen investment banks to a meeting last month to get them to quicken the pace of applications for companies seeking to sell shares on the tech board, according to sources familiar with the matter.
At the meeting, the bourse indicated it would expedite the approval process and loosen some requirements, the sources said, asking not to be identified discussing private information. The regulator aims to ensure that all enterprises that have submitted applications can receive a review and feedback this year, the sources said.
After a years-long clampdown on share sales and tighter scrutiny of private enterprises, Beijing has shifted its stance as economic challenges, including a trade war, have mounted. Earlier this year, President Xi Jinping presided over a meeting with key entrepreneurs including Alibaba Group Holding co-founder Jack Ma, underscoring a softer stance.
At a forum last month, China Securities Regulatory Commission chairman Wu Qing said that China will accelerate the development of a capital market better suited to supporting technological innovation and more actively cultivate long-term capital for the market. Regulators are also seeking to stoke share sales on the mainland, as listings from Chinese firms have surged in Hong Kong.
The Shenzhen exchange late last month also published rules to make it easier for technology firms already listed on the ChiNext board to raise funds to improve their ability to innovate.
The exchange did not immediately respond to an emailed request for a comment.
China's stock exchanges in Shanghai, Shenzhen and Beijing accepted 150 new applications for initial public offering (IPO) in June, the highest monthly tally this year. The majority was accepted by Beijing, according to exchange data. Listings in Hong Kong hit the highest since December 2022 last month, as a rally in the Asian financial hub's stocks drove a rush for share sales.
Listings in China plunged for three straight years, reaching 222 billion yuan last year, down from 1.24 trillion yuan in 2021, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. So far this year, China has seen 114 billion yuan in listings. BLOOMBERG
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Why China's ultimatum to Myanmar rebels threatens global supply of heavy rare earths
Why China's ultimatum to Myanmar rebels threatens global supply of heavy rare earths

Straits Times

time3 hours ago

  • Straits Times

Why China's ultimatum to Myanmar rebels threatens global supply of heavy rare earths

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox FILE PHOTO: A soldier from the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) puts on his shoes as he and his comrade cross a stream towards the front line in Laiza, Kachin state, January 29, 2013. REUTERS/David Johnson/File photo The global supply of heavy rare earths hinges in part on the outcome of a months-long battle between a rebel army and the Chinese-backed military junta in the hills of northern Myanmar. The Kachin Independence Army since December has been battling the junta over the town of Bhamo, less than 100 km (62 miles) from the Chinese border, as part of the civil war that erupted after the military's 2021 coup. Nearly half the world's supply of heavy rare earths is extracted from mines in Kachin state, including those north of Bhamo, a strategically-vital garrison town. They are then shipped to China for processing into magnets that power electronic vehicles and wind turbines. China, which has a near-monopoly over the processing of heavy rare earths, has threatened to halt buying the minerals mined in KIA-controlled territory unless the militia stops trying to seize full control of Bhamo, according to three people familiar with the matter. The ultimatum issued by Chinese officials to the KIA in a meeting earlier this year, which is reported by Reuters for the first time, underscores how Beijing is wielding its control of the minerals to further its geopolitical aims. One of the people, a KIA official, said the Chinese demand was made in May, without detailing where the discussions took place. Another person, a KIA commander, said Beijing was represented by foreign ministry officials at the talks. Reuters could not determine whether China had carried out its threat. Fighting in the region has restricted mining operations and rare-earth exports from Myanmar have plunged this year. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. 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China's foreign ministry said in response to Reuters' questions that it was not aware of the specifics of deliberations with the KIA. "An early ceasefire and peace talks between the Myanmar military and the Kachin Independence Army are in the common interests of China and Myanmar as well as their people," a ministry spokesperson said. A senior KIA general did not respond to a request for comment. The KIA official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive matters, said Beijing also offered a carrot: greater cross-border trade with KIA-controlled territories if the militia abandoned efforts to seize Bhamo, a logistics hub for the junta that's home to some 166,000 people. "And if we did not accept, they would block exports from Kachin State, including rare-earth minerals," said the official, who did not elaborate on the consequences of an economic blockade. Beijing is not seeking to resolve the wider civil war but it wants fighting to subside in order to advance its economic interests, said David Mathieson, an independent Myanmar-focused analyst. "China's pressure is a more general approach to calming down the conflict." DEFYING CHINA The battle for Bhamo began soon after the KIA wrested control of the main rare-earths belt in Kachin last October. After its takeover, the KIA raised taxes on miners and throttled production of dysprosium and terbium, sending prices of the latter skyrocketing. Supply has been squeezed, with Beijing importing 12,944 metric tons of rare-earth oxides and metals from Myanmar in the first five months of 2025, according to Chinese customs data. That is down half from the same period last year, though exports rose more than 20% between April and May. The KIA, which analysts estimate has over 15,000 personnel, was founded in 1961 to fight for the autonomy of Myanmar's Kachin minority. Battle-hardened through decades of combat and funded by a combination of local taxation and natural resources, it is among the strongest of Myanmar's rebel groups. The militia is confident of its ability to seize Bhamo and believes Beijing won't ultimately carry out its threat to stop exports due to its thirst for the minerals, two of the people said. Myanmar has been in crisis since the military overthrew a democratically-elected government in 2021, violently quashing protests and sparking a nationwide armed rebellion. Swathes of territory were subsequently seized by anti-junta forces, but the rebels have come under Chinese pressure to make concessions to the military. Beijing has also sent jets and drones to the junta, which is increasingly reliant on airpower, according to the U.S.-based Stimson Centre think-tank. China, which has major investments in Myanmar, last year brokered a ceasefire for the junta to return to Lashio, a northeastern town housing a regional military command. More than 200 km to the north, some 5,000 KIA and allied personnel have been involved in the offensive for Bhamo, according to a KIA commander with direct knowledge of the fighting. Losing Bhamo would cut off the military's land and river access to parts of Kachin and neighbouring region, isolating its troops housed at military bases there and weakening its control over northern trade routes, according to Maj. Naung Yoe, who defected from the junta after the coup. The junta spokesperson's office told Reuters that China may have held talks with the KIA, but it did not respond to a question about whether it had asked Beijing to threaten a blockade. "China may have been exerted pressure and offered incentives to the KIA," it said in a statement. Beijing first advised the rebels to pull back from Bhamo during negotiations in early December, according to the KIA official. Instead of withdrawing from Bhamo after those talks, the KIA doubled down, according to the commander and the official. The International Institute for Strategic Studies think-tank said in a May briefing that the battle for Bhamo had cost the KIA significant resources and hundreds of casualties. Beijing became more confrontational during further discussions that took place in spring, when its representatives threatened to stop rare-earth purchases, the official said. A disruption in the movement of heavy rare earths from Kachin could lead to a deficit in the global market by the end of the year, said Neha Mukherjee of U.K.-based consultancy Benchmark Mineral Intelligence. Supplies of the critical minerals outside China were already constrained, she said: "In the short term, during the brief disruption period, prices outside of China could shoot up higher." BATTLE FOR BHAMO The KIA has pushed junta troops into a handful of isolated pockets, according to the commander. But the junta retains air superiority and has devastated large parts of Bhamo with relentless airstrikes, according to the KIA official, the commander and a former resident of the town. The junta spokesperson's office said it was permitted to strike such sites because the KIA had been using them for military purposes, though it did not provide evidence. Nathan Ruser, an analyst at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute think-tank who has reviewed satellite imagery of Bhamo, said much of the damage across the town appeared to be from airstrikes. Airstrikes have killed civilians including children and destroyed schools and places of worship, according to Khon Ja, a Kachin activist from Bhamo who said her home had been bombed. "I don't know for how long that the revolutionary groups will be able to resist Chinese pressure," she said, adding that existing border restrictions had led to shortages of petrol and medicine in Kachin. Despite the obstacles, KIA leaders believe capturing Bhamo would shift momentum in their favour and strengthen public support. If the ethnic army were to take control of the entire state, then Beijing would have no option but to negotiate and sideline the junta, the commander and the official said. "China, which needs rare earths, can only tolerate this for a limited time," the commander said. REUTERS

Indonesia's sovereign wealth fund Danantara appoints four banks to lead up to US$10 billion loan: sources
Indonesia's sovereign wealth fund Danantara appoints four banks to lead up to US$10 billion loan: sources

Business Times

time3 hours ago

  • Business Times

Indonesia's sovereign wealth fund Danantara appoints four banks to lead up to US$10 billion loan: sources

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EU chief demands China address trade imbalance as tensions flare
EU chief demands China address trade imbalance as tensions flare

Business Times

time3 hours ago

  • Business Times

EU chief demands China address trade imbalance as tensions flare

[STRASBOURG] European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen accused China of distorting trade and limiting access for European firms two weeks ahead of a summit between the economic powers. 'If our partnership is to move forward, we need a genuine rebalancing: fewer market distortions, less overcapacity exported from China, and fair, reciprocal access for European businesses in China,' von der Leyen told the European parliament in Strasbourg on Tuesday (Jul 8). Beijing has imposed export controls on rare earth magnets, hitting European Union industries hard and compounding an increasingly unbalanced trading relationship. The move has dashed signs of a thaw earlier this year between the EU and China because of US President Donald Trump's tariff policies. China's Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The 27-member bloc imposed tariffs on electric vehicles over allegations Chinese producers benefit from unfair subsidies. The EU also excluded the country's firms from public contracts for medical devices earlier in 2025, sparking a tit for tat retaliation from Beijing. 'China invested early in many of the technologies of the future,' von der Leyen said. 'But then it started flooding global markets with cheap, subsidised goods, to wipe out competitors.' 'Entire Western industries closed – from solar panels to mineral processing – leaving China to dominate,' the commission president said. Combined with a lack of progress over longstanding trade and economic issues, tensions have ramped up ahead of a summit between Brussels and Beijing planned for the second half of July. The Chinese government cancelled part of what was meant to be a two-day summit. 'Goods and services that are 'made in China' get an automatic 20 per cent price advantage in public bids,' von der Leyen said. 'This is simply not fair. The system is explicitly rigged.' BLOOMBERG

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