Wednesday, August 1, 2007

A quiet revolution in China’s capital markets

When China first began privatizing its state-owned enterprises in the 1990s, the intent resembled that of other privatization programs around the world: to use capital market pressures to improve the performance of a large number of state-owned companies, many of which had weak balance sheets and were not as commercially focused as publicly held companies elsewhere. However, the government wanted to retain substantial shareholdings in and influence over these companies, which precluded the full privatization of state assets. To allow such companies to raise capital in that context, a two-tier ownership structure was put in place. Essentially, the original equity remained legally distinct from the new equity and formed a separate class of shares held by the existing state-linked owners. Although both classes had the same theoretical rights to profits and votes, the nontradable shares could not be sold on the public markets

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