China
-
JW (Cayman) Therapeutics has launched pre-deal investor education for its Hong Kong IPO, setting the final stage of the deal ahead of launch in motion.
-
China has unveiled major revisions to its law governing commercial banks, with the changes set to help strengthen corporate governance and the risk disposal mechanism of domestic lenders.
-
Shanghai-listed SDIC Power Holdings has priced its $200.6m London offering of Global Depository Receipts (GDRs) at the bottom of the marketed range.
-
China Minsheng Banking Corp sold a floating rate bond through its Hong Kong branch last Friday, nabbing $500m from the club-style transaction.
-
In this round-up, China's economic rebound strengthens in the third quarter, the country’s legislature passes a new law on export control to protect sensitive technology, and the law governing commercial banks faces major revisions.
-
Xiaomi Corp-backed electric scooter maker Ninebot has set the issue price for its Rmb2.08bn ($309m) IPO on Shanghai’s Star market, the first offering of depository receipts in China.
-
In this round-up, China’s September inflation data disappoints, import volume beats expectations by a large margin, and Ant Group might be added to the trade blacklist by the US ahead of its jumbo IPO.
-
Agricultural Bank of China and Bank of China’s investment arm tapped the bond market on Thursday, joining a host of other issuers that also sought fresh funding.
-
Asia’s dollar bond market has been swamped with new deals this week. Thursday was no different, with corporate borrowers from Greater China alone raising just over $3bn between them.
-
KWG Living Group Holdings, a property manager, and real estate developer Radiance Holdings launched bookbuilding for their Hong Kong IPOs on Friday.
-
Chinese discount retailer Miniso Group Holding raised $608m from a successful US listing on Thursday, after pricing the deal above the marketed range.
-
Fitch Rating’s China arm, Fitch (China) Bohua Credit Ratings, assigned its first domestic rating five months after securing a licence in the world’s second largest bond market. But international agencies still face plenty of hurdles to growing their businesses onshore, writes Addison Gong.