BIZCHINA / Review & Analysis |
Time to link HK, mainland stock marketsBy Hong Liang (China Daily)Updated: 2007-02-13 08:40 The latest rush by Hong Kong-listed mainland enterprises to seek yuan-denominated A share listings in Shanghai is putting forward a strong case for linking the two markets. This idea has been floating around Hong Kong for quite some time. It's received wide support from the government as well as the financial community. Recognizing that unification of the two exchanges is an impossibility at this time, financial experts are focusing on ways to create a channel for trading dually listed mainland shares in both markets. Such a channel would help remove the inherent anomalies in the existing dual-listing arrangement. It would pave the way for the creation of a market big enough to become an efficient and reliable financial intermediary that can meet the projected capital needs of China's economic development. In one of his essays, Joseph Yam, chief executive of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, the de facto central bank, wrote: "It would be in the interests of the country to create a channel between the financial markets of the mainland and Hong Kong to allow them to function as one, much larger market with greater liquidity, more efficient price discovery, and better market discipline and risk management." For historical and other reasons, a range of basically the same financial instruments are traded in the stock markets on the mainland and in Hong Kong. For example, a growing number of mainland companies' shares are traded as H shares in Hong Kong and A shares on the mainland. They are essentially the same instruments although traded in different
currencies and subject to different supervisory and regulatory requirements.
Holders of these two different classes of shares usually enjoy the same voting
and other rights. But there is no mechanism of arbitrage under the present
regulatory framework to efficiently equalize the prices of the same companies'
shares traded in the two different markets.
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