BEIJING, May 17 -- China's stock regulator is telling
brokers to seek its opinions over operations and risk controls before filing
applications for initial public offerings in a bid to shore up its corporate
governance.
Brokerages must report financial conditions and
internal control measures to the watchdog, which will decide whether they are
qualified for IPO applications, the China Securities Regulatory Commission said
late on Thursday.
Stock houses also should report whether their senior
executives have been punished by the CSRC for any financial wrongdoing in the
past 36 months, according to the regulator.
The stock regulator's opinions will be part of the
brokers' documents when they are presented for the final IPO approval, the
statement said.
"Apparently, the CSRC wants to ensure the quality of
publicly traded brokers," said Wei Zheng, a West China Securities Co trader.
"Scrutiny will definitely be tighter and only strong players are likely to
proceed with their IPOs."
Not a single Chinese mainland stock brokerage has
conducted an IPO since January 2003 when CITIC Securities Co listed in Shanghai.
Six domestic brokers last year acquired existing listed firms for back-door
listings.
Nearly a dozen mainland brokerages unveiled plans
last year to launch IPOs on the mainland markets with some previously aiming at
wrapping up listings by the end of last year.
But the enthusiasm cooled as the domestic stock
indexes slumped by nearly half from highs in October 2007 amid jitters over
further macroeconomic tightening and weaker economic growth.
A source at a Shanghai-based brokerage that has filed
an IPO application said that it was informed about the reporting issue a week
before and would offer additional information soon.
Earlier reports said that four brokers - Everbright
Securities, Orient Securities, Merchants Securities and Western Securities - may
become the first batch of brokers to have their IPO applications reviewed.
(Source: Shanghai Daily)