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Soho China, Shimao, R&F and 8 other Chinese developers may be ineligible for mainland cash

  • Soho China, Shimao Group, Guangzhou R&F Properties and eight others have seen their valuations drop below the floor that qualifies them for the scheme

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Several Hong Kong-listed Chinese property developers, including Guangzhou R&F Properties, risk being excluded from the Stock Connect programme as their valuations have fallen below the statutory minimum. Photo: SOHU
Zhang Shidongin Shanghai

A clutch of Hong Kong-listed Chinese property developers risk losing the backing of mainland investors, as their market values fall below the threshold limit for inclusion in the Stock Connect programme.

The cross-border investment scheme gives mainland investors access to a large pool of stocks traded in Hong Kong, while overseas investors are able to buy yuan-traded shares on the mainland’s exchanges.

Soho China, Shimao Group Holdings, Guangzhou R&F Properties and eight other companies on the Hang Seng Composite SmallCap Index have seen their market capitalisation fall below the HK$4 billion (US$512.2 million) floor that qualifies them for the scheme. That would be a further hit to these developers that are already plagued by liquidity stress and growing calls for winding-up by unpaid creditors.

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Based on the rules set by the Shanghai and Shenzhen bourses, any stock on the small-cap gauge will be kicked out of the cross-border investment scheme, should their average month-end market value fall below the HK$4 billion mark for 12 consecutive months preceding the review date.

The expulsions may take place as early as August, when the mainland’s exchanges are set to verify the eligibility for the mutual access scheme following the quarterly index rebalancing by compiler Hang Seng Indexes.

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Mainland Chinese property stocks listed in Hong Kong will be dealt a blow if they are made ineligible for purchase by mainland investors, as onshore investors were the main drivers of a recent rebound. The Hang Seng Mainland Properties Index had rebounded by as much as 40 per cent within a month through May 20, after Beijing introduced a broad package to bail out the industry last month. Now, most of those gains have been erased.

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