The lettering "Börse Frankfurt" (Frankfurt Stock Exchange) is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt am Main, western Germany, on Feb 24, 2022. (DANIEL ROLAND / AFP)

For Chinese companies seeking overseas financing, Europe has emerged as the preferred choice ahead of the United States this year and, for the first time, generated more funds, global financial data provider Dealogic said on Thursday.

Five Chinese companies have raised more than US$2.1 billion from the Zurich and London stock exchanges by issuing global depository receipts-GDRs-so far this year.

Five Chinese companies have raised more than US$2.1 billion from the Zurich and London stock exchanges by issuing global depository receipts-GDRs-so far this year.

In the same period, other Chinese companies raised less than US$400 million from Wall Street, according to Dealogic.

Dong Dengxin, director of the Wuhan University of Science and Technology's Finance and Securities Institute, said it is totally plausible for Chinese companies to shift their focus for the time being as the US capital market has been increasingly politically oriented.

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In this sense, the stock connect program linking the Chinese mainland bourses with the major European exchanges has provided a better financing channel for Chinese companies.

International investors in the European market are provided with more investment targets. Economic and trade ties between China and Europe will also be further strengthened, Dong said.

The stock connect program between the Shanghai Stock Exchange and the London bourse started in June 2019, using which A-share companies can issue GDRs in London. The program was expanded in February this year to include the Zurich, Frankfurt and Shenzhen exchanges.

Data from the public domain showed that at least 13 A-share companies have announced their plans to issue GDRs on major European exchanges so far this year.

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Zhao Haizhou, eastern region A-share offering leader for the capital market services group at Deloitte China, said the relatively lower threshold for GDR issuance-20 billion yuan (US$2.9 billion) of market capitalization would suffice-as well as the easier application process have made GDRs a good choice for Chinese companies seeking market expansion or mergers and acquisitions overseas.

Given the higher liquidity of the Zurich bourse, more A-share companies are expected to go in for GDRs here in the near future. The stock exchange also provides an alternative for Chinese companies as the audit dispute between China and the US is yet to be resolved, said Zhao.

The China Securities Regulatory Commission, the Ministry of Finance and the US Public Company Accounting Oversight Board signed an audit oversight cooperation agreement in late August-a big step in resolving the audit dispute that has been dogging US-listed Chinese companies for three years.

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Although detailed measures have not been released, the odds for the 200-plus US-listed Chinese companies to get delisted are now much lower, said Alvin Tse, eastern region Hong Kong offering leader for the capital market services group at Deloitte China.

While Chinese companies' interest in listing in the US started to recover in July, the overall initial public offerings and fundraising amounts have drastically contracted this year, according to Deloitte.

The professional services provider estimated that 13 Chinese companies will likely make their stock market debut in the US by the end of the third quarter of this year, down 68 percent year-on-year. Their total financing is projected to decline by 97 percent year-on-year to US$450 million.

shijing@chinadaily.com.cn