China
        

From Chinese media

M&As of listed companies hit 989b yuan in 2006-2010

Updated: 2011-02-17 16:54

By Qiang Xiaoji (chinadaily.com.cn)

Twitter Facebook Myspace Yahoo! Linkedin Mixx

The capital market played an increasingly important role in mergers and acquisitions (M&As) of China's listed companies in the past five years, the China Securities Journal reported Thursday.

Related readings:
M&As of listed companies hit 989b yuan in 2006-2010 80% of 758 listed companies see profit growth
M&As of listed companies hit 989b yuan in 2006-2010 
Chinese firms raise 1t yuan from A-share markets in 2010
M&As of listed companies hit 989b yuan in 2006-2010 M&A deals rose by 30 percent last year
M&As of listed companies hit 989b yuan in 2006-2010 China spends $91b on overseas M&As in 3 yrs

From 2006 to 2010, M&As of the country's listed companies reached a total of 989 billion yuan ($150 billion), Yang Hua, the director-general of the Department of Listed Company Supervision of the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), told the paper during an exclusive interview.

According to the latest statistics provided by Yang, 47 major M&As took place in 2010 with a total transaction amount of 133.8 billion yuan.

This year, the CSRC will promote the healthy and rapid development of M&As in six aspects: M&A bodies, pricing, approval process, risk control, information disclosure and intermediary liability, Yang said.

He said M&As have helped the integration and upgrade of the industry, which greatly promoted the quality of assets and profit levels.

E-paper

Ear We Go

China and the world set to embrace the merciful, peaceful year of rabbit

Preview of the coming issue
Carrefour finds the going tough in China
Maid to Order

European Edition

Specials

Mysteries written in blood

Historical records and Caucasian features of locals suggest link with Roman Empire.

Winning Charm

Coastal Yantai banks on little things that matter to grow

New rules to hit property market

The State Council launched a new round of measures to rein in property prices.

Top 10 of 2010
China Daily in Europe
The Confucius connection