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China Halts Over 40 IPOs Amid Regulatory Probe

Many IPOs in Shanghai and Shenzhen have been held up by a CSRC inquiry into intemediaries including Tian Yuan Law Firm in Beijing, China Dragon Securities and CAREA Assets Appraisal


A sculpture of a bull is seen outside the Shenzhen Stock Exchange at the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen in Guangdong province in late 2008. Photo: Bobby Yip, Reuters.

 

Chinese bourses have halted more than 40 initial public offerings (IPOs) in Shanghai and Shenzhen amid a regulatory probe into several intermediaries in the deals, according to official exchange disclosures.

The Shenzhen Stock Exchange suspended more than 30 IPOs, including public share sale plans by BYD Co‘s chip unit, on August 18, according exchange filings.

And the Shanghai Stock Exchange has pressed the pause button on eight IPOs targeting the city’s tech-focused STAR Market since August 19.

The companies attribute the IPOs’ halt to an investigation by the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) into intermediaries including Beijing-based Tian Yuan Law Firm, China Dragon Securities Co and CAREA Assets Appraisal Co.

The news was first reported by Chinese media.

Tighter scrutiny on IPOs comes as Beijing launches a flurry of regulatory crackdowns against sectors ranging from Internet to tutoring.

On Monday, China said it would tighten scrutiny over accounting firms in a fight against financial forgery, vowing “zero tolerance” toward misconduct.

• Reuters and Jim Pollard

 

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China Strengthens Supervision of Accounting Firms in Fight Against Fraud

From E-Commerce to Education, China’s Season of Regulatory Crackdown

 

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.