US Approves Delisting Bill Targeting Chinese Companies

US Approves Delisting Bill Targeting Chinese Companies

The House of Representatives on Wednesday unanimously passed a bill that threatens to delist Chinese companies, including e-commerce giants Alibaba (NYSE: BABA), JD.com (NASDAQ: JD), Pinduoduo (NASDAQ: PDD), and EV maker Nio (NYSE: NIO), from US exchanges if they fail to comply with the inspections from US regulators within three years.

With approval from the House, the Holding Foreign Companies Accountable bill now awaits President Trump’s signature to take effect. It targets the issue that China doesn’t allow inspectors from the US watchdog Public Company Accounting Oversight Board to review Chinese companies that trade on American markets.

Although the problem has been discussed for years, Chinese firms kept looking to the US to attract more international capital. The tensions between the two economies and the Luckin Coffee accounting scandal pushed the US regulator to move forward and impose new rules.

Separately, the Securities and Exchange Commission eyes a recommendation that could allow Chinese auditors to adhere to the inspection requirement without violating China’s laws. The SEC could issue the proposal this month.

Currently, more than 250 Chinese companies are listed on US bourses with the combined market capitalization surpassing USD 2 trillion, the Wall Street Journal wrote, citing S&P Global Market Intelligence. Chinese companies have raised about USD 12 billion in IPOs this year.

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