Published: 19:05, May 18, 2020 | Updated: 02:21, June 6, 2023
HK may become a magnet for US-listed mainland companies
By Luo Weiteng in Hong Kong

As US-listed mainland companies face an increasingly unfriendly climate in New York, Hong Kong can become a magnet to attract promising mainland firms to seek listings here, says the local bourse's chief executive.

Charles Li Xiaojia, chief executive of Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Ltd (HKEX), said in a recent interview with Fortune that Hong Kong will open its doors wider to mainland companies who leave the US stock market.

As relations between the US and China have fallen to new lows in the wake of the coronavirus outbreak, he believes Hong Kong will develop further as a “bridge” and “connector” between the world’s two largest economies

But this does not mean the Hong Kong stock exchange, Asia's third-largest in terms of market capitalization, will lower its standards and allow in any “bad apples”, Li stressed.

As relations between the US and China have fallen to new lows in the wake of the coronavirus outbreak, he believes Hong Kong will develop further as a “bridge” and “connector” between the world’s two largest economies. 

“From a relative perspective of importance, (Hong Kong) will probably become more important,” said Li.

With the mainland and Hong Kong making positive efforts to reopen more quickly than Western countries, "the global economic recovery will likely stem from Asia", Li noted.

There will be a fresh spate of IPOs from mainland enterprises as the world's second-largest economy takes the lead in returning to normal, he predicted.

Mainland e-commerce giant JD is reportedly seeking a second listing that could raise up to $3 billion in Hong Kong as early as June. 

The long-anticipated Hong Kong listing by the Nasdaq-listed behemoth may become a much-needed confidence boost for the city at such a difficult time - like its New York-listed rival Alibaba’s $13 billion blockbuster debut in Hong Kong in November at the height of the city’s violent protests. 

By the end of last year, out of the total 2,449 listed companies in Hong Kong, some 50.7 percent or 1,241 were from the mainland. They contributed to a staggering 73.3 percent of total market capitalization and 82.5 percent of total market turnover, data from HKEX shows. 

In early May, Li said he would not seek reappointment after tenure of more than a decade. His contract ends in October 2021.

sophia@chinadailyhk.com