, by Wang Yuqian, Caixin Online, 2 April, 2012:
More at the link. I can't tell if this is a meaningful move in the right direction, or if there is really a lot less to this than meets the eye. Full disclosure of due diligence is required only if the proposed IPO offering is 25% or more over and above the given average? And elimination of the 3-month holding requirement for institutional investors? I may well be missing something(s) important, but something here doesn't seem quite right.
(Beijing) – China's securities regulator rolled out long-awaited revisions to initial public offering rules with measures designed to increase price monitoring oversight.
The rules issued by the China Securities Regulatory Commission April 1 state that companies with price-to-earnings ratios that are 25 percent or more higher than the industrial average during the IPO inquiry are now required to publicly release pricing inquiry information and corresponding risk analyses.
More at the link. I can't tell if this is a meaningful move in the right direction, or if there is really a lot less to this than meets the eye. Full disclosure of due diligence is required only if the proposed IPO offering is 25% or more over and above the given average? And elimination of the 3-month holding requirement for institutional investors? I may well be missing something(s) important, but something here doesn't seem quite right.