Senate Passes Bill to Delist Chinese Companies like Alibaba and Baidu from
Exchanges
The Senate overwhelmingly
approved legislation Wednesday that could lead to Chinese companies such as Alibaba Group Holding
Ltd. and Baidu Inc. being barred from listing on U.S. stock exchanges
amid increasingly tense relations between the world’s two largest economies.
The bill, introduced by Senator
John Kennedy, a Republican from Louisiana, and Chris Van Hollen,
a Democrat from Maryland, was approved by unanimous consent and would require
companies to certify that they are not under the control of a foreign
government.
U.S. lawmakers have raised red
flags over the billions of dollars flowing into some of China’s largest
corporations, much of it from pension funds and college endowments in search of
fat investment returns. Alarm has grown in particular that American money is
bankrolling efforts by the country’s technology giants to develop leading
positions in everything from artificial intelligence and autonomous driving to
internet data collection.
Shares in some of the biggest
U.S.-listed Chinese firms, including Baidu and Alibaba, slid Thursday in New
York while the broader market gained.
If a company can’t show that it
is not under such control or the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, or
PCAOB, isn’t able to audit the company for three consecutive years to determine
that it is not under the control of a foreign government, the company’s
securities would be banned from the exchanges.
“I do not want to get into a new
Cold War,” Kennedy said on the Senate floor, adding that he wants “China to
play by the rules.”
“Publicly listed companies should all be held
to the same standards, and this bill makes common sense changes to level the
playing field and give investors the transparency they need to make informed
decisions,” Van Hollen said in a statement. “I’m
proud that we were able to pass it today with overwhelming bipartisan support,
and I urge our House colleagues to act quickly.”
Stricter U.S. oversight could
potentially affect the future listing plans of major private Chinese
corporations from Jack Ma’s Ant Financial to SoftBank-backed
ByteDance Ltd. But since discussions on increased
disclosure requirements began last year, many other Chinese companies have
either listed in Hong Kong already or plan to do so, said James Hull, a
Beijing-based analyst and portfolio manager with Hullx.
“All Chinese U.S.-listed entities
are potentially impacted over the coming years,” he said. “Increased disclosure
may hurt some smaller companies, but there’s been risk disclosures around PCAOB
for a while now, so it shouldn’t be a shock to anyone.”
In a sign of broad support for
the measure, Representative Brad Sherman, a California Democrat on the House
Financial Services Committee, introduced a companion bill in that chamber.
Sherman said in a statement that Nasdaq moved this
week to delist China-based Luckin Coffee after executives at the company admitted fabricating $310 million
in sales between April and December 2019.
“I commend our Senate
counterparts for moving to address this critical issue,” Sherman said. “Had
this legislation already been signed into law, U.S. investors in Luckin Coffee likely would have avoided billions of dollars
in losses.”
House leaders are discussing the
legislation -- and a separate Senate-passed bill to sanction Chinese officials
over human rights abuses against Muslim minorities -- with lawmakers and
members of the relevant committees, a Democratic aide said.
The Senate measure -- S. 945 -- is
an example of the rising bipartisan pushback against China in Congress that had
been building over trade and other issues. It has been amplified especially by
Republicans as President Donald Trump has sought to blame China as the main
culprit in the coronavirus pandemic.
GOP lawmakers have in recent
weeks unleashed a torrent of legislation aimed at punishing China for not being
more forthcoming with information or proactive in restricting travel as the
coronavirus began to spread from the city of Wuhan, where it was first
detected.
Trump escalated his rhetoric
against China on Wednesday night, suggesting that leader Xi Jinping is behind a
“disinformation and propaganda attack on the United States and Europe.”
“It all comes from the top,”
Trump said in a series of tweets. He added that China was “desperate” to have
former Vice President Joe Biden win the presidential race.
Kennedy told Fox Business on
Tuesday that the bill would apply to U.S. exchanges such as Nasdaq
and the New York Stock Exchange.
“I would not turn my back on the
Chinese Communist Party if they were two days dead,” Kennedy said. “They cheat.
And I’ve got a bill to stop them from cheating.”
At issue is China’s longstanding
refusal to allow the PCAOB to examine audits of firms whose shares trade on the
New York Stock Exchange, Nasdaq and other U.S.
platforms. The inspections by the little-known agency, which Congress stood up
in 2002 in response to the massive Enron Corp. accounting scandal, are meant to
prevent fraud and wrongdoing that could wipe out shareholders.
Since then China and the U.S.
have been at odds on the issue even as companies including Alibaba and Baidu
have raised billions of dollars selling shares in American markets. The
long-simmering feud came to the forefront last year as Washington and Beijing
clashed over broader trade and economic issues, and some in the White House
have been urging Trump to take a harder line on the audit inspections.
Last week, Trump said in an
interview on Fox Business that he’s “looking at” Chinese companies that trade
on the NYSE and Nasdaq
exchanges but do not follow U.S. accounting rules. Still, he said that cracking
down could backfire and simply result in the firms moving to exchanges in
London or Hong Kong.
While not technically part of the
government, the PCAOB is overseen by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
The ability to inspect audits of Chinese firms that list in the U.S. is certain
to come up at a roundtable that the SEC is holding July 9 on risks of investing
in China and other emerging markets.
Senators Kevin Cramer, Tom
Cotton, Bob Menendez, Marco Rubio and Rick Scott are also sponsors of the bill.
Rubio applauded the passage of the Kennedy-Van Hollen
bill and said it incorporated aspects of a similar bill he introduced last
year.
“I was proud to work with Senator
Kennedy on this important legislation that would protect American retail
investors and pensioners from risky investments in fraudulent, opaque Chinese
companies that are listed on U.S. exchanges and trade on over-the-counter
markets,” Rubio said in a statement. “If Chinese companies want access to the
U.S. capital markets, they must comply with American laws and regulations for
financial transparency and accountability.”
According to the SEC, 224
U.S.-listed companies representing more than $1.8 trillion in combined market
capitalization are located in countries where there are obstacles to PCAOB
inspections of the kind this legislation mandates.