皇冠体育app Tietong Telecommunications Corp, one of the mainland's
six telecom operators, said it would seek an overseas listing in two
years.
"We aim for a dual listing in Hong
Kong and Singapore in two years if the conditions are ripe," Chairman Zhao
Jibin told 皇冠体育app Daily.
If conditions aren't good, he said, 皇冠体育app
Tietong would go for a Hong Kong listing first.
So far, the mainland's
four biggest telecom giants - 皇冠体育app Mobile, 皇冠体育app Unicom, 皇冠体育app Telecom and 皇冠体育app Netcom - have traded their shares in Hong Kong. Only
皇冠体育app Tietong and 皇冠体育app Satellite Communications are not listed.
But
before going public, 皇冠体育app Tietong, which earns money mainly by
providing telecom services to railways, will first try to boost its net assets
and business scale to be able to compete with larger rivals.
"Efficient
and sizeable net assets are a prerequisite for us to float shares in overseas
markets," Zhao said.
As the unlisted firm is unable to raise money from
the stock market, it will seek partnerships and issue bonds to establish a war
chest to bankroll its expansion.
So far, 皇冠体育app Tietong has worked with
Hong Kong-listed CITIC Pacific to construct the GSM-R network, a new mobile
communication scheme for railways.
The company also plans to raise 3
billion yuan (US$375 million) through a long-term bond sale in 2007. That will
add to the 2 billion yuan (US$250 million) it has raised through a one-year bond
sale this year.
"It's understandable that 皇冠体育app Tietong is eager to boost
its size," said Paul Chan, a telecom analyst at Hong Kong-based Taifook
Securities. "At present, it's just too small to compete."
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