![]() The Chinese Industrial Ministry called out hoarding, saying in a notice issued Wednesday that the practice is “strictly prohibited” and that there is an “urgent need to deepen industry management” in what is the world's largest solar manufacturing market. ![]() This appears to confirm the suspicions of the utility NextEra, whose chief financial officer Kirk Crews said on an earnings call in April that Chinese multinational companies in Southeast Asia were withholding shipments of both solar modules and the cells that comprise them. The reason: a Commerce Department probe into solar suppliers in the region that's ongoing. That probe, which has inspired the ire of both the public and the private sector, is examining whether solar companies operating out of Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam are evading long-standing U.S. tariffs by building panels in Southeast Asia using Chinese materials. These four countries supply roughly 80% of the panels in the U.S., and the uncertainty has placed utilities in a bind. The hoarding may have had the desired effect. Chinese companies in need of capital have long headed to the U.S.In June, the Biden administration agreed to wave tariffs on solar panels from the four countries caught up in the probe for two years, a major win for the Chinese industry. Ximalaya drops US IPO plan amid China's crackdown on overseas listing Septem3:59 pm Chinese companies have raised about US13 billion through first-time share sales in the US this year, Bloomberg data showed. Stock market to tap deep-pocketed investors, raising more than 100 billion in first-time share sales over the past two. Thursday, Ximalaya, one of China's most prominent audio streaming platforms backed by Tencent, said it will drop its IPO plan in the United States filed in April.ĭidi’s IPO was the second largest US listing by a Chinese firm on record, after Alibaba Group Holding Ltd’s () US25 billion blockbuster debut in 2014. LinkDoc was expected to raise up to 211 million on the Nasdaq. Ximalaya has previously suspended its IPO plan after DiDi's disastrous IPO in July. It was the second-largest Chinese IPO in the U.S. pipeline among firms that had already filed to list, according to Refinitiv data. It is the first Chinese firm known to have pulled back from IPO plans since China's cybersecurity regulator toughened its approach to oversight last week with an investigation into ride-hailing giant Didi Global Inc just two days after its New York debut. Amid a cybersecurity probe, Chinese authorities have pressured Ximalaya to drop its U.S. That was soon followed with an order for Didi's app be removed from app stores. IPO plan and list in Hong Kong instead since May. ![]() ![]() Under pressure from regulators and distrust from investors, many Chinese companies such as Xiaohongshu, a social commerce platform backed by Alibaba and Tencent Keep, a fitness app backed by Tencent and Ximalaya, have either dropped or suspended their U.S. IPO plans since July.Īccording to Reuters, China is currently framing new regulations to ban IPOs outside of the country for tech companies with data security risks. Yet the pressure for Chinese tech companies doesn't stop there - the U.S. ![]() Securities and Exchange Commission is also issuing new disclosure requirements, asking Chinese companies to reveal their use of variable interest entities (VIEs) to investors. LinkDoc Technology Limited, a medical data platform company backed by Alibaba, was the first to scrape its IPO plan in the U.S. LinkDoc Technology is now planning to lead a $200 to $300 million financing round before its upcoming IPO in Hong Kong, according to Bloomberg. ![]()
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