CRI Home - Photo- Forums - Talk China - Surf China - About China -  
  Webcast | CRI Today | China | World | Biz | SciTech | Sports | Life | Showbiz | Easy FM | Learn Chinese / English | Weather | Events
 
 
 
 
China Jianyin Acquires Southern Securities
2005-8-1 17:05:35      CCTV.com
China Jianyin Investment has signed an agreement to acquire Southern Securities.
China Jianyin Investment signed an agreement Monday to take over Southern Securities, the country's fifth-largest brokerage.

It is the government's latest move to bailout the debt-laden brokerage industry.
    
Armed with nearly US$100 million of central bank loans, Jianyin will take control of the investment business of Southern Securities along with its 74 outlets.

After the takeover, Southern Securities, which had its license previously revoked over mismanagement and irregularities, will be renamed Jianyin Securities.
    
Over the past year, regulators have shut or arranged the takeover of about 20 small to mid-sized securities houses, as part of a broader effort to clean up the financial sector.

(Photo Source:Baidu)

        Talk China        Print        Email        Recommend
 
Related Stories:
v Brokers to Get $1.2 Bln Loans 07-18
v Brokerages Look for Innovative Products 04-11
v Regulator Plans Survey of Brokerage Industry 02-16

  Copyright of crienglish.com. All rights reserved.

Reproduction of text for non-commercial purposes is permitted provided that both the source and author are acknowledged and a notifying email is sent to us.
 
 

 
postalChina Post is progressing with its scheme to merge its two sub-businesses.
textilePeter Mandelson said he would hold talks with Bo Xilai this week.
YahooChinese e-commerce operator Alibaba.com is in the late stages of talks to sell a 35 percent stake to Yahoo Inc.
BOC IPO Could Take Place in 2005
China, Hong Kong, Japan, and Aussie Market Roundup 
CNOOC's Market Value Up By $7b
Producer Price Index Rises
Lenovo Profit Up 6% After IBM PC Buy
Power Supply Sees Robust Growth
HK Urges Manufacturers to Go "Green"
Major HK Banks's Interest Rate Hike
China Mobile First-Half Profit Rises