China Investment Bank CICC to Acquire Two Smaller Rivals
(Bloomberg) — China International Capital Corp. plans to acquire two smaller brokerages as the nation seeks to strengthen its securities industry to better compete with global banking giants.
CICC, one of China’s top brokerages, proposed a share-swap merger with Dongxing Securities Co. and Cinda Securities Co. to support financial market reforms and promote the development of the securities industry, the Beijing-based firm said in a statement Wednesday. Details on the share swap and pricing weren’t announced.
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The three entities had 1.01 trillion yuan ($142 billion) in combined total assets as of the end of September, according to Bloomberg calculations, ranking it China’s fourth largest following Citic Securities Co., Guotai Haitong Securities Co. and Huatai Securities Co. Still, that’s less than one tenth of Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
Beijing is trying to cultivate first-class domestic investment banks capable of standing up to global heavyweights like Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley. The merger aims to fast-track the creation of a world-class firm, boosting the securities industry’s growth, and better serve national strategies, CICC said.
Trading of CICC, Dongxing and Cinda in Shanghai will be suspended and the pause is expected to last no more than 25 days, as the planned merger is relatively complex, according to their statements. CICC will also halt trading in Hong Kong. Dongxing and Cinda have a combined market capitalization of 100 billion yuan.
China had been mulling combining its largest state-run investment banks years ago, but progress stalled until President Xi Jinping urged financial regulators in 2023 to cultivate a few top-ranked brokerages. The nation’s securities watchdog also voiced its support for consolidation, with a goal of having two to three banks that can compete globally by 2035.
The deal would be the second big merger after Guotai Junan Securities Co. and Haitong Securities Co. last year unveiled the terms of their proposed merger to create a larger state-backed brokerage.
Consolidating
The latest merger would also further consolidate brokerages under Central Huijin Investment Ltd., an arm of sovereign fund China Investment Corp. Central Huijin is the largest shareholder of CICC with a 40.1% stake, and the ultimate controller of Dongxing and Cinda via shareholding by its units.

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