ICBC could be first to use greenshoe (China Daily) Updated: 2006-09-15 08:44
The Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) could be the first Chinese
company to make use of a greenshoe option in its domestic initial public
offering (IPO), China's top securities regulator said yesterday.
The
regulator is considering introducing new schemes on stock issues and
underwriting, allowing large companies offering more than 400 million shares to
the public to use the greenshoe option for the first time.
"According to
current progress, the ICBC should be able to carry out that scheme," Shang
Fulin, chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) said at a
financial forum in Xianghe, near Beijing.
The ICBC, the country's largest
lender, aims to complete its listing simultaneously in Hong Kong and Shanghai by
late October, and plans to sell as much as US$21 billion shares on the two
bourses.
The adoption of the greenshoe option was written in a revised
draft rule published by the CSRC on Monday. The regulator is seeking public
consultation on the rule until Friday. Industry insiders predicted that it could
be promulgated as early as the end of September.
A greenshoe option
typically allows underwriters to sell up to 15 per cent more shares than the
original number set by the issuer, if demand exceeds expectations and the stock
trades above its offering price.
Greenshoe, also known as an
over-allotment option, gets its name from the Green Shoe Company in the United
States, which was the first company to have such an option. "The option aims
to stabilize share prices once they are listed and therefore helps reduce the
volatility," said Justin Haik, executive director of Morgan Stanley's Global
Capital Market Department.
China's converting of non-tradable shares to
tradable ones over the past 16 months has successfully strengthened its domestic
markets. And regulators are making more efforts to improve the infrastructure of
the capital markets, Shang said.
Monday's revised draft rule also allowed
a simultaneous online and offline subscription of stocks by institutional and
retail investors, which is expected to shorten the subscription period by two
days.
The scheme will make the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges more
attractive, and could lure more companies to make large IPOs domestically,
analysts said. The chairman of the CSRC yesterday also revealed a rough
schedule for China's launch of stock index futures, which will trade on
Shanghai's new financial derivatives exchange.
"We hope that by the end
of this year or early next, China will begin trading stock index futures," Shang
said.
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