Tuesday, July 01, 2008

GEM (Growth Enterprise Market)

On 1 July 2008, new rules will come into effect in an effort to breath new life into GEM. The GEM Board hit a peak in 2004 with 21 companies raising over HK$2.7 billion when the HKEx closed the door on backdoor listings (pun intended). Since then, fewer companies seeking listings on the GEM Board and so far this year only 2 companies have come to market raising just over HK$200 million.

Why? Because the GEM Board is not as prestigious as Nasdaq on which it was modelled. There are many reasons including rubbish companies, crooked management, etc. The end result is that companies stayed away if they could wait for a listing on the Main Board. It is hoped that the new rules will raise the threshold a bit and keep out the truly undesreving.

Key provisions:
1. Positive cashflow of at least HK$20 million for the 2 years before listing
2. At least 2 years operations under the same management
3. Continuing reporting requirements made more stringent
4. Easier promotion to the Main Board

During the review of the performance of GEM, it had been suggested that rather than tightening the rules, it should go the route of the AIM Board in London where it is "caveat emptor" (let the buyer beware). However, it was decided that the HK investor is not sufficiently sophisticated to make the appropriate judgment on a stock. Let's see if the new rules will make any difference.

Footnote: Since 2004, corporate finance advisers have found ways around the backdoor listing prohibition.

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