Английская Википедия:CITIC Group

Материал из Онлайн справочника
Перейти к навигацииПерейти к поиску

Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Distinguish Шаблон:For Шаблон:Infobox company

CITIC Group Corporation Ltd., formerly the China International Trust Investment Corporation (CITIC), is a state-owned investment company of the People's Republic of China, established by Rong Yiren in 1979 with the approval of Deng Xiaoping.[1] Its headquarters are in Chaoyang District, Beijing.[2] Шаблон:Asof it is China's biggest state-run conglomerate[3] with one of the largest pools of foreign assets in the world.[4]

Businesses

Its initial aim was to "attract and utilize foreign capital, introduce advanced technologies, and adopt advanced and scientific international practice in operation and management."[5] It now owns 44 subsidiaries including China CITIC Bank, CITIC Limited, CITIC Trust and CITIC Merchant (mainly banks) in Mainland China, Hong Kong, the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.Шаблон:Citation needed

History

CITIC Group was founded as the China International Trust Investment Corporation (Шаблон:Zh; abb. CITIC), a Chinese state-owned enterprise in 1979. In the 1980s, Chinese government founded many for profit corporations, which CITIC was under the leadership of Rong Yiren, a former businessman and politician at that time, who chose to stay in the mainland China in the 1950s after his family business was nationalized.[6] His son, Larry Yung,[nb 1] was the former chairman of CITIC Group's listed subsidiary CITIC Pacific. Larry also led the Hong Kong office and parent company of CITIC Pacific since 1986; Larry became a Hong Kong-based businessman since 1978.[6] Throughout the 1980s, Xiong Xianghui served as CITIC vice chair and significant CITIC leadership was drawn from the Intelligence Bureau of the Joint Staff Department.[7]

CITIC Group headquarters was based in Beijing; Hong Kong office was formally opened in 1985.[6] The Mainland-based CITIC Bank was founded by the group in 1984.[6] The group also acquired 12.5% stake of the Hong Kong flag carrier Cathay Pacific in 1987,[6] and became a member of a shareholders' agreement in 2006;[8] the stake was sold to fellow state-owned company Air China in 2009.[9] The group also acquired Hong Kong-based Ka Wah Bank in 1986.[6] In 1990, the group also absorbed some of the subsidiaries of another state-owned company, Шаблон:Zh.[10] Other notable acquisitions included 38.3% stake of another airline Dragonair, 20% stake of Hong Kong Telecom, etc.[6]

CITIC also acquired a Hong Kong listed company and renamed to CITIC Pacific in the 1990s.Шаблон:Citation needed

2000s

Шаблон:Main Its subsidiary, CITIC Pacific (Шаблон:Zh, now known as CITIC Limited), made unauthorized bets on the foreign currency market in October 2008 and lost HK$14.7 billion (US$1.9 billion, when accounted for in mark-to-market terms). Senior executives such as Financial Controller Chau Chi-Yin and Group Finance Director Leslie Chang resigned.[11][12][13] Its stock price plunged 55.1 percent upon the resumption of trade.[14]

In 2015, CITIC Group sold 10% stake of CITIC Limited to a joint-venture of Itochu and Charoen Pokphand for HK$34.4 billion (US$4.54 billion); the joint venture also subscribed new convertible preferred shares for HK$45.9 billion (or US$5.9 billion).[15] It was reported it was the largest investment ever made by a Japanese general trading company.[16] The transaction is also the largest acquisition in China by a Japanese company, and the largest investment by foreigners in a Chinese state-owned enterprise.[17]

CITIC CEFC bond default

In November 2016, CITIC CLSA acted as the sole bookrunner for CEFC Shanghai's US$250 bond issuance. CITIC CLSA hid from the market that the bond deal was only 60% subscribed at pricing. It manipulated the bond price in the secondary market in an effort to offload the 100mm USD bond CITIC CLSA held on its balance sheet.[18]

In May 2018, CITIC Group announced they would repay ca 450 million euros owed by CEFC Europe to finance and banking group J&T within days but since the debt was not paid a week later, J&T announced it had taken over shareholder rights and installed crisis management at CEFC Europe.[19][20] Several days later, CEFC Shanghai defaulted on $327 million in bond payments, and offered to make the payments six months after the maturity date.[21]

In October 2020, some retail CEFC bondholders in Hong Kong filed a complaint to the Securities and Futures Commission in Hong Kong against the bond's sole underwriter CITIC CLSA.[18]

Group companies

Equity investments

See also

Шаблон:Portal

Footnotes

Шаблон:Reflist

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Commons category

Шаблон:CITIC Шаблон:Economy of China

Шаблон:Authority control


Ошибка цитирования Для существующих тегов <ref> группы «nb» не найдено соответствующего тега <references group="nb"/>