China cos in US stock market 'scam'

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China cos in US stock market 'scam'

Posted: Tue Dec 21 2010, 16:22 hrs New York:

US market regulator Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is investigating Chinese companies that listed on American bourses through "reverse takeover", according to a media report.

"One of China's least-noticed exports to the US has been hundreds of Chinese companies that slipped onto US stock exchanges through back-door mergers with dormant shell companies," the Wall Street Journal has reported.

According to the publication, many of these entities have minimal revenues, questionable accounting and inscrutable corporate governance.

Quoting people with knowledge about the probe, the daily said the SEC has begun a crackdown on practices of the "reverse takeover" market for Chinese listings.

The market regulator has initiated investigation into how networks of US accountants, lawyers and bankers have helped bring many Chinese firms on to the US stock markets, it added.

SEC has also started focusing on individual Chinese companies for accounting violations and lax auditing practices.

"... the House financial-services committee is also revving into gear and may hold hearings on Chinese-company accounting in 2011... The committee's fear is that some companies are rife with self-dealing and potential fraud and weak international standards have let it go largely undetected," the report noted.
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US is just worried that China uses USD to buy its way into Wall Street and its market...

reverse takeover is a perfectly legitimate business strategy... the buying private company pays off the existing shareholders of public company with cash, for their shares... what scam are they talking about?

when you buy shares with cash, do you expect MAS to investigate all your personal financial and tax matters before calling it a legitimate transaction?

:D
 
Americans created the biggest mortgage scam in history that cause the whole world to suffer
 
Pretty amazing - a supportive word from China on EU debt crisis and financial markets cheer!!

I see China offering support via IMF. With a larger stake in IMF/world bank it means more influence within IMF/World Bank. US has traditionally held this role but with deficits ....

To have an idea how powerful the Chinese are in the financial world just look at bloomberg. It is always China this and China that. Everyday it is about China.

I suspect that should Chinese economy dip into recession, the world would go into a deep recession. After all EU and US economies are dead and it is only China with its 10% GDP growth that is pulling the world along.

10% of the world's second largest economy does make an impact.


China backs the European Union’s efforts to ensure financial stability, Vice Premier Wang Qishan said today, spurring a rally in the euro.

China supports the International Monetary Fund’s measures and “has taken concrete action to help some EU members counter the sovereign-debt crisis,” Wang said at the start of the Third EU-China High-Level Economic & Trade Dialogue, a one-day forum in Beijing to discuss economic and trade relations.

The euro advanced against 14 of its 16 most-traded counterparts on speculation investments by China, which holds a record $2.65 trillion in foreign-exchange reserves, will ease Europe’s fiscal crisis and boost the allure of the region’s assets. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said in October that China supports a stable euro and won’t reduce European bond holdings.

“EU members have taken a number of steps to actively respond to the sovereign-debt crisis,” Wang said. “We hope these measures will quickly produce results and lead to a steady recovery of the EU economies.”

The euro yesterday fell to the lowest in two weeks against the dollar and yen on speculation some European nations will struggle to raise funds amid a slew of credit-rating and outlook changes. Greece and Ireland were rescued by their neighbors and the IMF this year, and investors now are concentrating their sights on Portugal as economies throughout the continent slash budgets to appease investors concerned by fiscal excess.

Irish Rating

“The comments would be a good Christmas present for the euro if Asian support for the EU continues into next year,” said Kurt Magnus, executive director of foreign-exchange sales at Nomura Holdings Inc. in Sydney. “There’s a lot of people looking to sell euro and go into 2011 with a core short position and there’s no way that you would be short euro,” if China continued to support the region, he said.

Moody’s Investors Service last week cut Ireland’s debt rating by five levels and put Greece on review for a possible “multi-notch” downgrade. It said Dec. 15 it may lower Spain’s creditworthiness. Standard & Poor’s is reviewing its assessments of Ireland, Portugal and Greece.

China’s economy faces “uncertainties” next year, and because of that the country is paying “great attention” to whether the EU’s sovereign-debt crisis can be controlled, “especially in the first quarter of next year, what will happen,” Commerce Minister Chen Deming said at a press briefing at today’s meeting.

Show of Support

Policy makers in the world’s fastest-growing major economy will see if the EU can improve on prevention of risks and “translate their consensuses into practice for them to step out of the crisis as soon as possible,” Chen said.

The Portuguese government said last week that China had made a “clear statement” of financial support during Finance Minister Fernando Teixeira dos Santos’s visit to Beijing.

China is willing to invest 4 billion euros ($5.3 billion) to 5 billion euros in Portuguese government debt in the first quarter of next year, Lisbon-based newspaper Jornal de Negocios reported on Dec. 16, without saying where it got the information.

It wasn’t clear if China would acquire debt on the secondary market, in government bond auctions or in a direct transaction with the Portuguese treasury, the newspaper said. China’s purchases would cover about a third of Portugal’s refinancing needs through April, Jornal said.

The EU is China’s largest trade partner and China is the EU’s second-biggest export market, with bilateral trade increasing 33.1 percent in the 11 months through November from a year earlier to $433.88 billion, China’s customs department said Dec. 10.

The EU’s trade deficit with China widened to 122.2 billion euros in the first nine months of 2010 from 97.8 billion euros a year earlier, the Union’s statistics office in Luxembourg said Dec. 17. EU exports to China increased 39 percent in the first nine months while imports from the Asian country rose 30 percent.

Other officials in attendance at today’s meeting include EU Competition Commissioner Joaquin Almunia, and EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht.
 
it's a common trick to use RTO to get into markets that's not so friendly to them. no?
 
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