China Equity House

IFR Asia Awards 2013
2 min read
Asia
Fiona Lau

While many banks won roles in huge syndicates on Chinese IPOs, only Goldman Sachs managed to secure leading roles on every important deal of the year.

PICC Group started the trend for big syndicates in November 2012, when it hired 17 bookrunners for its US$3.6bn Hong Kong IPO, but the 21 bookrunners on the US$1.1bn listing of Chinese brokerage China Galaxy Securities in March 2013 rewrote the record. Despite the intense competition, Goldman hung on to lead roles on both the Galaxy and PICC listings, bringing in key cornerstone investors amid weak market sentiment towards China.

AIG became a cornerstone investor for PICC’s IPO with a US$500m commitment, thanks to Goldman. The bank also secured AIA and Khazanah Nasional as cornerstones for Galaxy Securities’ offer, investing US$50m and US$100m, respectively.

The inclusion of world-class cornerstone investors also helped boost investor confidence in the deals, especially in a year when PRC corporations and private wealth management accounts bought most Chinese IPOs. The story was similar with Sinopec Engineering’s US$1.8bn and Huishan Dairy’s US$1.5bn Hong Kong IPOs. Goldman was a joint global co-ordinator on both.

Goldman’s leading role on every big IPO also put the bank on top in IFR’s China equity and equity-linked league table in the 12 months through mid-November.

The bank raised US$7bn for Chinese issuers through 24 deals, 33% more than the second-placed institution.

The US$3.1bn H-share private placement in February for Sinopec provided another example of the execution and distribution abilities that made Goldman a top choice for many important Chinese issuers.

Having led eight transactions for Sinopec since 2007, the oil giant was comfortable with the decision to let the bank solely complete the jumbo placement in February 2013 in the largest sole bookrun follow-on offering out of Asia ex-Japan.

The A-share IPO market was closed throughout the review period, but Goldman, through its China joint-venture Goldman Sachs Gao Hua Securities, scored some success with follow-on offerings, helping clients access much-needed capital, despite a difficult regulatory backdrop.

Its mandates included the Rmb23.7bn (US$3.9bn) private placement for Industrial Bank, while it was also the only foreign bank to work on both tranches of China Merchants Bank’s US$5.5bn A- and H-share rights issues.

Goldman also helped reopen the US market for Chinese stocks in March with a US$199m follow-on offering in online retailer VIPshop.com. It was the first US follow-on from China since 2011.

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