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QFII earns 20 bln yuan from China in three years
Industrial sector sees soaring profits in 1st eight months
China's stock trade volume drops 30% in August
Gov't orders closer watch over food from Japan
CSRC denies rumors over B-share reform
RMB value against U.S. dollar hits new high
carve out  
More foreign capital pours into Beijing's real estate market
Govt has no timetable for wider yuan range
Number of conglomerates on the rise in China
China, EU sign agreements on toy, food safety
Business Booming at Revolution Restaurant
IMF/World Bank Annual Meetings Open
Industry  
China exports 53 pct of Chinese-made air conditioners
China's biggest commercial bank to launch IPO
SK-II suspends selling products in Chinese mainland
China's net oil imports up 17.6% in first half of year
China's bankers show doubt about economy
China aims to export 70b USD worth of autos and auto components by 2010
 
Gov't to examine ICBC's IPO application Tuesday
BEIJING, Sept. 25 (Xinhua) -- A special committee in charge of stock issuance under the China Securities Regulatory Commission has announced that it will consider the initial public offering (IPO) application from the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China(ICBC) in the A-share market Tuesday.


The ICBC, the country's biggest lender, plans to go public simultaneously on the mainland and Hong Kong bourses next month.


The ICBC will issue 13 billion Renminbi-denominated A shares on the Chinese mainland stock market, accounting for 3.96 percent of its total shares after the IPO, and 35.39 billion H-shares on the Hong Kong market, with the same issue price.


By the end of June, total assets of the ICBC exceeded 70 trillion yuan (8.75 trillion U.S. dollars), with net profits of more than 25.1 billion yuan. Its ratio for non-performing loans stood at 4.1 percent.


The government hopes its "big four" state banks -- the ICBC, Bank of China, China Construction Bank and the Agricultural Bank of China -- once plagued by bad debts, will strengthen corporate governance and streamline operations with the help of foreign investors and public listings.


The moves are part of the efforts made by the government, the major stockholder of the "big four", to overhaul China's banks before the full opening of the country's financial market to foreign competition by the end of this year under China's commitments to the World Trade Organization.


After the IPO of the ICBC, the Agricultural Bank of China will become the only member of "big four" that is not listed. Enditem


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