Private Placement of China-Listed Real Estate Firms: A Conceptual Idea
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Private Placement Features
2.1. Regulations
2.2. The Rise of Private Placement in China
Regulations of China
3. Private Placement Phenomena
3.1. Announcement Effect
3.2. Long-Term Performance
3.3. Discount
4. Theoretic Framework
4.1. Agency Theory
4.2. Certification Hypothesis
4.3. Over-Optimism Hypothesis
4.4. Argument on Hypotheses
5. Influence Variables
6. Risks in China’s Real Estate Sector
7. Private Placement as a Risk Mitigation Strategy
- Reducing Debt Burden:
- 2.
- Supplementary Working Capital:
- 3.
- Improved Corporate Governance:
- 4.
- New Opportunities Brought by External Stakeholders:
- 5.
- The Need for Information by Real Estate Companies:
- 6.
- Private Placement’s Certification Role:
- 7.
- Market Segmentation:
- 8.
- Other Benefits and Features:
8. Concerns on Private Placement
9. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The latest average price was calculated by dividing the total money traded by the total traded shares in the same period. |
2 | Those types of investors are public listing companies’ block shareholders, real controllers of the company, strategic investors or their arm-length connected persons, and the person or organization that has absolute control over the company through this private placement deal. Any individual or organizational investor not included in the list shown above must lock their newly bought shares for up to 12 months. Since February 2020, the lock-in period for regular private placement investors has been reduced from 12 months to 6 months, while the related party is locked from 36 months to 18 months. |
3 | New amendments include “A Decision on Amending the Administrative Measures on The Issuance of Securities by Listed Companies”,”A Decision on Revising Interim Measures for The Administration of Securities Issuance of GEM Listed Companies”, and “A Decision on Amending Detailed Rules for The Implementation of Non-Public Offering of Shares of Listed Companies” (from now on referred to as the New Rules on Refinancing). |
4 | They used a meta-analysis method and revealed that the average cumulative excess return is −0.98 percent and the median is −1.39%, which is statistically significant. Non-private placement outlier returns, on the other hand, are less unfavorable. |
5 | There is, of course, knowledge asymmetry among investors. Investors who get an informational advantage will continue to push out others who do not. However, similar information asymmetries occur even among the best-informed investors. The issuance market will finally fail after all investors have been eliminated from the market by this method of elimination. In order to attract or compensate the information-disadvantaged, the issuing business and underwriters employ a reduced offering to persuade investors to subscribe to the new shares (Rock 1986). Comparable mechanisms are also presented in the work of (Beatty and Ritter 1986). |
6 | The data for the year 2023 is as of 24 November 2023. |
7 | From 2006 to July 2023, major shareholders or their related parties participated in 87 of 144 real estate private placement cases. ”ShiLianHang” is the only case involve in managerial private placement. |
8 | They present an example: “Local Commercial Real Estate Developers.... but they often lack knowledge about the local, regional, or national demand for office space…, real estate investment trusts (REITs) specialize in gathering this information. A local real estate developer and a REIT May,... ensure that the REIT provides a credible forecast of local office demand. The price … reflects its specialized expertise in estimating office demand and in valuing and operating office buildings. The REIT becomes a residual claimant to the accuracy of the forecast embedded in its equity claim, ….”. |
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Country | Main Findings | Source |
---|---|---|
The US | The dollar proceeds increased from USD 8.1 billion to USD 153.9 billion between 1990 and 2000. | Brophy et al. (2004) |
The number of cases climbed from 127 to 2719 between 1995 and 2006; overall proceeds rose from USD 1.87 billion to USD 88.0 billion. | Wruck and Wu (2009) | |
Brazil | Between 1995 and 2002, the companies raised approximately BRL 70 million through 653 private placements, in contrast to 123 public offerings that yielded around BRL 25.7 million in capital. | Bordeaux-Rego and Ness (2006) |
Sweden | Private placement accounted for about half of the SEOs. | Cronqvist and Nilsson (2004) |
The UK | Private placements had overtaken rights issues as the most important means of refinancing for British companies. | Armitage and Snell (2001) |
Australia | The capital raised increased 20-fold from AUD 2.3 billion to AUD 46 billion from 1995 to 2009. | Xu et al. (2017) |
New Zealand | The average private placement proceeds were NZD 779.3 million with an average proportion of outstanding shares of 8.4%. | Anderson et al. (2006) |
India | The average size of a private placement was about USD 75.94 million. | Katti et al. (2020) |
East Asian (Japan and Korea) | Private placement arrangements were more common among group companies, and they accounted for a smaller share of new equity issuance compared to rights issues. | Kato and Schallheim (1993); Baek et al. (2006) |
China | In 2013, an estimated 263 listed companies employed private placement, with total proceeds of CNY 300 billion (USD 46.133 billion). | Tao et al. (2018) |
There had been an increasing number of publicly traded firms offering private equity placement (from 52 in 2006 to 505 in 2017), and the scale of fundraising had enlarged tenfold during this time. | Shi et al. (2020) |
Hypothesis | Main Finding | Authors | |
---|---|---|---|
Agency Theory | Monitoring Hypothesis | Positive stock price reaction to announcements reflects enhanced supervision by external investors; discounts in private placement can be seen as compensation for this monitoring service. | Wruck (1989) |
Large shareholders play a key role in monitoring management performance when ownership concentration increases. | Morck et al. (1986) | ||
Entrenchment Hypothesis | Managers have authority over when and to whom equity is sold, potentially for entrenchment purposes. The market may respond negatively when the market understands the managers’ intent. | Barclay et al. (2007) | |
Managerial placement is consistent with the entrenchment hypothesis but not the certification hypothesis. | Tao et al. (2018) | ||
Tunnelling Hypothesis | Major shareholders in China seize the interests of minority shareholders through private placement. | Zhang and Guo (2009) | |
Discounts in China’s private placement are employed for tunnelling or expropriating minority shareholders’ and external financial providers’ benefits. | Zhu et al. (2008); Xu and Xu (2011) | ||
Certification Hypothesis | Private placement helps address information asymmetry between the firm and the market. Participation by experienced and sophisticated investors is seen as a certification that the firm is undervalued. | Hertzel and Smith (1993) | |
The market perceives the issuance of PIPEs as a positive certification signal. | Floros and Sapp (2012) | ||
Over-optimism Hypothesis | Investors tend to get overly optimistic when events occur; investors may base their predictions on a company’s future success on comparable previous success stories. | Loughran and Ritter (1997) | |
When the market is more optimistic, the announcement effect of private placement is more noticeable. | Marciukaityte et al. (2005) | ||
Investor sentiment significantly impacts the discount of private placement; discounts may be even greater in the presence of over-optimism. | Lu and Li (2011) | ||
The impact of investor sentiment on private placement discounts is particularly pronounced in situations of intense market sentiment, such as bull and bear markets. | Li and Jian (2017); Wang et al. (2021); Yu et al. (2016) |
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Ning, Y.; Jalil, R.B.A. Private Placement of China-Listed Real Estate Firms: A Conceptual Idea. J. Risk Financial Manag. 2023, 16, 516. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm16120516
Ning Y, Jalil RBA. Private Placement of China-Listed Real Estate Firms: A Conceptual Idea. Journal of Risk and Financial Management. 2023; 16(12):516. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm16120516
Chicago/Turabian StyleNing, Yuping, and Rohaya Binti Abdul Jalil. 2023. "Private Placement of China-Listed Real Estate Firms: A Conceptual Idea" Journal of Risk and Financial Management 16, no. 12: 516. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm16120516
APA StyleNing, Y., & Jalil, R. B. A. (2023). Private Placement of China-Listed Real Estate Firms: A Conceptual Idea. Journal of Risk and Financial Management, 16(12), 516. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm16120516