Off the wire
Beijing gets 70 pct water from Yangtze River diversion  • Urgent: Suicide car bombing hits government office in Somalia  • China's natural gas transmission tariffs proposals positive for industry  • Spotlight: Turkey wedding blast turns paradise into hell with death toll hitting 30  • Author of Folding Beijing wins Hugo Award  • Pakistan condemns terrorist attack in Turkey  • (G20 Summit)Interview: Xi's upcoming meeting with Obama expected to enhance mutual trust: Chinese ambassador  • 1st LD: 10 killed, 5 missing after boat capsizes in western Indonesia  • Saudi men lobby for polygamy to marry widows and divorcees  • 7 killed, 2 missing in Typhoon Dianmu in northern Vietnam  
You are here:   Home

240 SMEs debut on New Third Board

Xinhua, August 21, 2016 Adjust font size:

A total of 240 small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) were added to China's New Third Board, marking a further expansion in China's over-the-counter market, after the board was officially established three years ago.

The move brings the number of companies listed on the New Third Board to 8,781 and represents China's effort to encourage the development of SMEs against the current downward economic pressure.

The market value of the 8,781 companies is about 3.36 trillion yuan (about 509 billion U.S. dollars).

Turnover on the New Third Board reached 2.68 billion yuan last week, a 19.27 percent decrease on the previous week.

The New Third Board, or National Equities Exchange and Quotation (NEEQ) system, serves as a national share transfer system for SMEs to transfer shares and raise funds.

It was initiated in 2006 as an experimental platform to facilitate financing for China's non-listed small and promising high-tech enterprises in Beijing's Zhongguancun Science Park.

The present system was officially established on Jan. 16, 2013 after years of trials in cities including Shanghai, Wuhan and Tianjin.

It complements the existing stock exchange, the SME board and the ChiNext board, being seen as an easy financing channel with low costs, simple listing procedures, and a short application period for companies not qualified for listing on the major exchanges. Endit