Shanghai Stock Exchange:-
The Shanghai Stock Exchange (SSE) (Chinese: pinyin: is a stock exchange that is based in the city of Shanghai, China. It is one of the two stock exchanges operating independently in the People's Republic of China, the other is the Shenzhen Stock Exchange. Shanghai Stock Exchange is the world's 6th largest stock market by market capitalization at US$2.3 trillion as of Dec 2011. Unlike the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, the Shanghai Stock Exchange is still not entirely open to foreign investors due to tight capital account controls exercised by the Chinese mainland authorities.
The current exchange was re-established on November 26, 1990 and was
in operation on December 19 of the same year. It is a non-profit
organization directly administered by the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC).
The Shanghai Clearing House provides security for financial market
participants, and efficient clearing services development purposes, but
also conductive to international peers inter-agency communication and
cooperation. It provides central counterpart clearing of foreign
currency in the inter bank market, including clearing, settlement, margin
management, collateral management, information services, consulting
services, and related management department under other business.
History
The formation of the International Settlement (foreign concession areas) in Shanghai was the result of the Treaty of Nanking of 1842 (which ended the First Opium War) and subsequent agreements between the Chinese and foreign governments were crucial to the development of foreign trade in China and of the foreign community in Shanghai. The market for securities
trading in Shanghai begins in the late 1860s. The first shares list
appeared in June 1866 and by then Shanghai's International Settlement
had developed the conditions conducive to the emergence of a share
market: several banks, a legal framework for joint-stock
companies, and an interest in diversification among the established
trading houses (although the trading houses themselves remained
partnerships).
In 1891 during the boom in mining shares, foreign businessmen founded
the "Shanghai Sharebrokers' Association" headquartered in Shanghai as
China's first stock exchange. In 1904 the Association applied for
registration in Hong Kong
under the provision of the Companies ordinance and was renamed as the
"Shanghai Stock Exchange". The supply of securities came primarily from
local companies. In the early days, banks dominated private shares but,
by 1880, only the Hong Kong and Shanghai local banks remained.
Later in 1920 and 1921, "Shanghai Securities & Commodities
Exchange" and "Shanghai Chinese Merchant Exchange" started operation
respectively. An amalgamation eventually took place in 1929, and the
combined markets operated thereafter as the "Shanghai Stock Exchange".
Shipping, insurance, and docks persisted to 1940 but were overshadowed
by industrial shares after the Treaty of Shimonoseki of 1895, which permitted Japan,
and by extension other nations which had treaties with China, to
establish factories in Shanghai and other treaty ports. Rubber
plantations became the staple of stock trading beginning in the second
decade of the 20th century.
By the 1930s, Shanghai had emerged as the financial center of the Far East, where both Chinese and foreign investors could trade stocks, debentures, government bonds, and futures. The operation of Shanghai Stock Exchange came to an abrupt halt after Japanese
troops occupied the Shanghai International Settlement on December 8,
1941. In 1946, Shanghai Stock Exchange resumed its operations before
closing again 3 years later in 1949, after the Communist revolution took place.
After the Cultural Revolution ended and Deng Xiaoping
rose to power, China was re-opened to the outside world in 1978. During
the 1980s, China's securities market evolved in tandem with the
country's economic reform and opening up and the development of
socialist market economy. On 26 November 1990, Shanghai Stock Exchange
was re-established and operations began a few weeks later on 19
December.
Chronology
- 1866 - The first share list appeared in June.
- 1871 - Speculative bubble burst triggered by monetary panic.
- 1883 - Credit crisis resulted speculation in Chinese companies.
- 1890 - Bank crisis started from Hong Kong.
- 1891 - "Shanghai Sharebrokers Association" established.
- 1895 - Treaty of Shimonoseki opened Chinese market to foreign investors.
- 1904 - Renamed to "Shanghai Stock Exchange".
- 1909-1910 - Rubber boom.
- 1911 - Revolution and the abdication of the Qing Dynasty. Founding of the Republic of China.
- 1914 - Market closed for a few months due to the Great War (World War I).
- 1919 - Speculation in cotton shares.
- 1925 - Second rubber boom.
- 1929 - "Shanghai Securities & Commodities Exchange" and "Shanghai Chinese Merchant Exchange" were merged into the existing Shanghai Stock Exchange.
- 1931 - Incursion of Japanese forces into northern China.
- 1930s - The market was dominated by the rubber share price movements.
- 1941 - The market closed on Friday 5 December. Japanese troops occupied Shanghai.
- 1946-1949 - Temporary resumption of the Shanghai Stock Exchange until the communist revolution. Founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949.
- 1978 - Deng Xiaoping emerged as the dominant figure in China's leadership, thus beginning a period of 'opening up' to the rest of the world.
- 1981 - Trading in treasury bonds were resumed.
- 1984 - Company stocks and corporate bonds emerged in Shanghai and a few other cities.
- 1990 - The present Shanghai Stock Exchange re-opened on November 26 and began operation on December 19.
- 2001-2005 - A four-year market slump which saw Shanghai's market value halved, after reaching a peak in 2001. A ban on new IPOs was put in April 2005 to curb the slump and allow more than US$200 billion of mostly state-owned equity to be converted to tradable shares.
- 2006 - The SSE resumed full operation as the yearlong ban on IPOs was lifted in May. The world's second largest (US$21.9 billion) IPO by the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) was launched in both Shanghai and Hong Kong stock markets.
- 2007-2008 - A "stock market frenzy" as speculative traders rush into the market, making China's stock exchange temporarily the world's second largest in terms of After reaching an all-time high of 6,124.044 points on October 16, 2007,[9] the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index ended 2008 down a record 65%] mainly due to the impact of the global economic crisis which started in mid-2008.
- 2010 - Agricultural Bank of China completed the world's largest IPO to date worth US$22.1 billion.
Structure
See also: Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor
The securities listed at the SSE include the three main categories of stocks, bonds, and funds. Bonds traded on SSE include treasury bonds (T-bond), corporate bonds,
and convertible corporate bonds. SSE T-bond market is the most active
of its kind in China. There are two types of stocks being issued in the
Shanghai Stock Exchange: "A" shares and "B" shares. A shares are priced
in the local renminbi yuan currency, while B shares are quoted in U.S. dollars.
Initially, trading in A shares are restricted to domestic investors
only while B shares are available to both domestic (since 2001) and
foreign investors. However, after reforms were implemented in December
2002, foreign investors are now allowed (with limitations) to trade in A
shares under the Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor (QFII)
program which was officially launched in 2003. Currently, a total of 98
foreign institutional investors have been approved to buy and sell A
shares under the QFII program. Quotas under the QFII program are
currently US$30 billion. There has been a plan to eventually merge the two types of shares in the future.
The SSE is open for trading every Monday to Friday. The morning
session begins with centralized competitive pricing from 07:45 to 07:55,
and continues with consecutive bidding from 09:30 to 11:30. This is
followed by the afternoon consecutive bidding session, which starts from
13:00 to 15:00. The market is closed on Saturday and Sunday and other
holidays announced by the SSE.
Indices
Main article: SSE Composite
The SSE Composite (also known as Shanghai Composite) Index is the
most commonly used indicator to reflect SSE's market performance.
Constituents for the SSE Composite Index are all listed stocks (A shares
and B shares) at the Shanghai Stock Exchange. The Base Day for the SSE
Composite Index is December 19, 1990. The Base Period is the total
market capitalization of all stocks of that day. The Base Value is 100.
The index was launched on July 15, 1991. At the end of 2006, the index
reaches 2,675.47. Other important indexes used in the Shanghai Stock
Exchanges include the SSE 50 Index and SSE 180 Index.
Listing Requirements
According to the regulations of Securities Law of the People’s Republic of China and Company Law of the People’s Republic of China, limited companies applying for the listing of shares must meet the following criteria:
- The shares must have been publicly issued following approval of the State Council Securities Management Department.
- The company’s total share capital must not be less than RMB 30 million.
- The company must have been in business for more than 3 years and have made profits over the last three consecutive years. This requirement also applies to former state-owned enterprises reincorporating as private or public enterprises. In the case of former state-owned enterprises re-established according to the law or founded after implementation of the law and if their issuers are large and medium state owned enterprises, it can be calculated consecutively. The number of shareholders with holdings of values reaching in excess of RMB 1,000 must not be less than 1,000 persons. Publicly offered shares must be more than 25% of the company’s total share capital. For company whose total share capital exceeds RMB 400 million, the ratio of publicly offered shares must be more than 15%.
- The company must not have committed any major illegal activities or false accounting records in the last three years.
Other conditions stipulated by the State Council.
- China currently has a preference for domestic firms only to list onto their stock exchanges; India has similar rules. However, China is considering opening up their capital markets to foreign firms in 2010.
The conditions for applications for the listing of shares by limited
companies involved in high and new technology are set out separately by
the State Council.
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