China Securities Regulatory Commission on Friday approved the
yuan-denominated A-share listing plan of China Construction Bank
(CCB), one of the nation's four big state-owned commercial
banks.
The approval will make CCB to lead the return of the giant
red-chip companies, including China Mobile, the world's largest
handset operator by the number of subscribers, and Petro China, the
nation's largest oil producer, to the mainland stock exchanges.
Red chips are mainland firms incorporated outside the mainland
and listed in Hong Kong.
The bank, Chinese partner of the American Bank, said it plans to
issue no more than 9 billion shares, less than 3.85 percent of the
expanded capital after the initial public offering.
The CCB is expected to raise some 60 billion yuan (US$8 billion)
if the initial public offering is priced at the closing price of
6.84 HK dollars per share in Hong Kong on Friday. It said all the
money will be used to boost its capital adequacy ratio.
The size of CCB's IPO is set to overtake the 46.6 billion yuan
of the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) in October
last year to become the biggest ever domestic share listing.
The bank may start trading of its A-shares on the Shanghai Stock
Exchange before October 1, a source with its research department
told Xinhua on condition of anonymity.
Earnings per share with the CCB in the first half of 2007 was
0.15 yuan, compared with 0.12 yuan of the ICBC and Bank of
China.
Its non-performing loans ratio stood at 2.95 percent at the end
of June, lower than the 3.29 percent half a year ago.
(Xinhua News Agency September 8, 2007)