The nation's two largest insurance firms are accelerating reforms
of shareholding rights with a long-term view to float on overseas
capital markets.
People's Insurance Company of China (PICC) and China Life Insurance
Co have submitted reform plans to the State Council for review,
said Wu Dingfu, chairman of the industry watchdog China Insurance
Regulatory Commission. Wu is also a delegate to the 16th Party
Congress.
If
the reform plan is approved, the companies will spin off their best
assets to form shareholding companies. They will then seek an
overseas listing.
"Overseas flotation would fund the expansion of the insurance
companies, and allow them to introduce better management," Wu
said.
The bold move would follow those made by other major State-owned
companies, such as oil giant PetroChina and telecom giant China
Mobile. They raised billions of US dollars via their listing arms
on overseas markets.
The scheme echoes the message of Party General Secretary Jiang
Zemin on Friday - that the government hopes to attract more foreign
investment into State-owned enterprises to push through tough
reforms.
"Sources of investment must be diversified," Jiang said in his
address to more than 2,000 delegates at the Party congress.
Wu
refused to say when the State Council would give the go-ahead in
its capacity as the top decision-making body.
But Tang Yunxiang, president of PICC, revealed the shareholding
company is expected to be launched in the first half of next
year.
"About 10 auditing companies are evaluating the assets of PICC...
We hope to set up the shareholding company early next year," Tang
told China Daily on the sidelines of the ongoing national congress
of the Party.
Tang also said international insurance giants are negotiating to
take stakes in the proposed spin-off company. He refused to
elaborate on the topic but earlier media reports said US-based
Citigroup might buy a 25 per cent stake - the maximum allowed by
China's central government.
PICC sells three-fourths of the nation's property insurance, and
China Life has two-thirds of the life-insurance market.
Encouraged by Jiang's call for deeper reform in the State sector,
Wu promised to gradually loosen controls on insurance companies
investing on stock markets in a bid to diversify their large idle
funds.
Wang said this could invigorate domestic insurers that have been
hindered by few investment channels.
Insurers were only allowed to buy deposits, mutual funds and
treasury bonds.
The Insurance Law that was revised last month has loosened the
control to a certain degree. But Wu said the liberalization process
would take a long time with the government remaining alert to
possible financial risks.
(China Daily November 11, 2002)
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