China creates $230 billion brokerage powerhouse as sector consolidates
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[September 06, 2024] By
Selena Li, Samuel Shen and Julie Zhu
HONG KONG (Reuters) -The merger of two state-backed brokerages in China
to create a sector leader with $230 billion in assets is part of
Beijing's drive to consolidate the $1.7-trillion industry amid
challenging markets, and the move is set to gather pace, analysts said.
Shanghai-based Guotai Junan Securities is set to acquire its cross-town
rival Haitong Securities via a share swap, the two companies said late
on Thursday. The deal is subject to regulatory and shareholder approval.
The combined entity, with 1.6 trillion yuan ($226 billion) in total
assets, will overtake Citic Securities as China's largest brokerage.
Trading in shares of Guotai Junan and Haitong was suspended on Friday.
Both Haitong and Guotai Junan are controlled by companies running state
assets for the Shanghai government.
Under the deal, Guotai Junan plans to issue new shares to investors in
Haitong's mainland China and Hong Kong listed entities. Guotai Junan
will also issue new shares in the onshore market to raise funds for the
deal, exchange filings showed.
"This marks the start of an industry-wide consolidation that will see
more mergers between major brokerages," said Huang Yan, fund manager of
Shanghai QiuYang Capital Co, referring to the Guotai Junan-Haitong deal.
The consolidation focus will be on firms backed by state shareholders,
Huatai Securities said in a research note.
Beijing has dialled up rhetoric about the need for reform in the
brokerage sector, with new directives to encourage mergers and
acquisitions and restructuring in an industry in which more than 140
Chinese and foreign players compete.
China's securities regulator said in March that it aimed to develop
about 10 leading institutions in about five years, with two to three
internationally competitive investment banks and institutions by 2035.
Beijing's ambition to create large, competitive investment banks comes a
few years after a slew of global banks, including Goldman Sachs and
Morgan Stanley, took full control of China businesses eyeing bigger
market share.
There have been announcements about mergers between six pairs of smaller
brokerages since end-2023, including, according to official Shanghai
Securities News, the merger of Ping An Securities and Founder
Securities.
PREVENTING RISK
The deal would fuel market expectations of more mergers including
potential deals between CICC and Galaxy Securities, according to Xu
Kang, an analyst at Hua Chuang securities.
Other possible mergers include a combination of Citic Securities and
China Securities, Xu said.
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Cars travel past a display showing Shanghai and Shenzhen stock
indexes near the Shanghai Tower and other skyscrapers at the
Lujiazui financial district in Shanghai, China February 5, 2024.
REUTERS/Xihao Jiang/File photo
Spokespersons for CICC, Galaxy Securities, Citic Securities, and
China Securities did not immediately respond to Reuters requests for
comment.
Shares of Chinese brokerages jumped on Friday on the merger news. An
index tracking China-listed brokerages gained as much as 2.6%, while
the CSSW Securities Index rose as much as 2.2%.
Shanghai-listed shares of CICC leapt as much as 8%, while Galaxy
Securities rose as much as 10% to a two-month high. In comparison,
the blue-chip CSI300 Index fell 0.5% to a seven-month low in the
late afternoon trade.
Market volatility and dwindling initial public offerings and other
capital market deals in a slowing economy have been weighing on the
sector's earnings, with the performance of the smaller brokerages,
in particular, taking a big hit.
Haitong, for example, suffered from quarters of plunging profits,
loss-making international business, and scandals that included a top
investment banker at the firm fleeing overseas before being arrested
due to suspected job-related crime.
China's 43 listed brokerages saw their first-half revenue shrink
16%, with net profit slumping more than one fifth during the same
period compared with a year ago, according to a research note from
Guolian Securities.
In April, the State Council issued a guideline highlighting the need
to strengthen regulation, prevent risks and promote the development
of the capital market. It also encouraged leading securities and
futures firms to enhance competitiveness through M&As,
restructuring, and other means.
The latest merger could send a positive signal to the market that
the "supply-side reform" in the sector was about to take place due
to challenging market cycles and a tightened regulatory landscape,
Morgan Stanley said in a research note.
"In the near term, we believe the announced deal could revive some
investor interest in broker stocks generally, especially those with
potential M&A stories," analysts at Morgan Stanley wrote.
($1 = 7.0921 Chinese yuan)
(Reporting by Selena Li, Samuel Shen and Julie Zhu; additional
reporting by Xie Yu; Editing by Sumeet Chatterjee and Stephen
Coates)
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