42 Chinese technology, media and telecommunication IPOs in the first half, an increase of 75 percent year-on-year, and their financing totaled 22.1 billion yuan, according to a report from PricewaterhouseCoopers on Tuesday. [Photo/IC] |
There were 42 Chinese technology, media and telecommunication IPOs in the first half, an increase of 75 percent year-on-year, and their financing totaled 22.1 billion yuan ($3.5 billion), it said.
"As we can see, a more streamlined and transparent listing procedure for IPOs has made the domestic exchanges more attractive. However, the positive momentum is expected to slow down in the second half of 2015 given the temporary freeze to IPOs by the regulatory body to cope with the recent significant capital market fluctuations," said Amanda Zhang, northern China technology industry leader with PwC China.
The State Council ordered the suspension of new share offerings on July 4 after a three-week stock market collapse.
Vincent Cheuk, market leader of Beijing entrepreneur group and northern China head of the private equity group at PwC China, said: "The IPO slowdown creates opportunities for private equity companies, hedge funds and sovereign wealth funds because the financing demand of enterprises has always been strong."
Regarding Chinese technology, media and telecommunication IPOs in the first half, the report said 30 were made on Shenzhen's ChiNext board and small and medium-sized enterprise board, nine were made on Shanghai's main board, and only three were undertaken overseas.
The report said the average price-earnings ratio of Chinese A-share technology, media and telecommunication companies had been as high as 74 by the end of August 31, while that by the end of June 30 it had been 115.
"In the long run, we still anticipate significant growth in technology, media and telecommunication listings on domestic exchanges as a result of the introduction of the new registration-based system, as well as the continuation of multi-level capital market reform," said Zhang.
She added that some Chinese technology, media and telecommunication companies will still choose overseas markets for listing because of their corporate structure and capabilities, as well as more mature investors in those markets.