Investing in China just grew murkier - CNN.com
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- China now requires company permission before accessing detailed records
- Background checks on potential Chinese investments have been hindered
- Some say move is in response to hedge funds who are shorting Chinese companies
First reported by the International Financial Law Review,
the State Administration of Industry and Commerce now requires company
permission before accessing records such as financial reports and
shareholder information.
Companies that sell
credit reports -- which give companies a quick read on the background of
the firm they are considering doing business with -- have been
hindered, said Peter Humphrey, managing director of ChinaWhys, an
international business risk advisory firm in Beijing.
"They are restricted now.
They cannot include personal identity information about individual
shareholders or financial data from the last three years," he said.
"There is a major impact as many companies consume thousands of these
reports every year, and that kind of information is no longer there, and
it is not possible to get a reliable credit rating on this or that
business partner without knowing how it's performing financially and who
owns it."
China's race for resources
Woman at the heart of 'China's Google'
Luxury shops cater to Chinese tourists
Many believe the move may
be in part a backlash against hedge funds like Muddy Waters Research,
which prominently took down Chinese timber company Sino-Forest.
The hedge fund has led similar short-selling crusade against other
North American-listed Chinese firms such as including Focus Media, Rino
International, China MediaExpress and Duoyuan Global Water, as CNNMoney reported. All were delisted after Muddy Waters' withering reports, with the exception of Focus Media.
But the information
clampdown also comes at a sensitive time for Chinese leadership as it
readies for its once-a-decade transfer of leadership at the top as
President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao, who are both in their final
year of office. Also in the backdrop is the public rise and fall of Bo
Xilai, a rising star who was dismissed as Communist Party chief of
Chongqing, the biggest metropolis in China. His right-hand man and
former top cop Wang Lijun spectacularly sought refuge in an American
consulate apparently fearing for his life and allegedly holding
incriminating information on his old boss. His wife, Gu Kailai, is also
being investigated on suspicion of murdering British businessman Neil
Heywood in a "conflict over economic interests," according to state media.
Subsequent reports suggest Bo's family was worth millions of dollars through business dealings and powerful political connections.
Difficulties getting
access to information on companies "began at the beginning of this year,
and it became a lot worse after the Bo Xilai scandal," said Humphrey,
who is founding president of the Association of Certified Fraud
Examiners in Mainland China.
"The people offering due
diligence services to multi-nationals considering relationships with
Chinese companies are finding certain information to complete the
picture is now missing when they are assessing a company for investment
purposes," he said.
"This is a handicap to
people investing in China right now. It is linked to the political
atmosphere of this year's leadership transition period, which has made
China more tense, and the gathering of legitimate business information
more sensitive."
The move to limit public
information on companies comes after the April arrest of 1,700 suspects
in a widespread crackdown on the illegal selling of personal
information, the Shanghai Daily reported, including an official in
Baoding who sold large amounts registered company information.
Dun & Bradstreet
Corp., which provides commercial information on businesses for credit
checks, suspended its Shanghai-based market research company, Shanghai
Roadway D&B Services Co., earlier this year after allegations after a
Chinese report it illegally collected information on 150 million
people, the Wall Street Journal reported.
end quote from:
No comments:
Post a Comment