In the last few months, a very noticeable trend in the Chinese market has been that foreign capital is flowing out, while Chinese private equity firms are stepping in to acquire the assets being sold off by the exiting foreign investors.
In terms of sectors, the heat of investment and financing in technology, especially the robotics industry, is obvious. In contrast, the large-scale industry, manufacturing and consumer sectors are more popular in the mergers and acquisitions (M&A) market.
Affected by geopolitical factors, foreign companies and foreign capital are selling off their assets in China. As a result, domestic Chinese capital is acquiring these assets. It is worth mentioning that in the last few months, private equity firms have been more active on transactions involving Chinese listed companies compared to before. For example, the acquisition of Tiamaes, a Chinese A-share listed company, by Qiming Capital is a very clear case in point.
In recent years, with the rapid development of industries such as information technology and artificial intelligence, China has introduced a series of new regulations in compliance, especially in data compliance, privacy protection and patent protection, moving towards stricter supervision.
Particularly in cross-border transactions, whether traditional deals or technology transfers, geopolitical factors have increased the uncertainties and led to stricter compliance and regulatory requirements. As a result, private equity investors are more cautious in selecting transaction counterparts or target companies.
The Antitrust Bureau of China, as the regulatory body responsible for conducting antitrust reviews of concentrations of undertakings in accordance with the law, is tasked with providing consultations, accepting filings related to antitrust reviews of concentrations of undertakings, and conducting corresponding antitrust hearings, investigations and reviews. In recent years, the bureau has increasingly promoted simplified procedures for filings of concentrations of undertakings, significantly streamlining the process and reducing the timeline for such filings. From this perspective, it has actually fostered the development of the M&A market.
There is no difference in how national security (or other) regulators look at financial investors depending on whether or not they are sovereign wealth investors.
Sanctions are becoming increasingly stringent. Influenced by geopolitical factors, China may impose countermeasures on transactions in specific national markets. For example, if a Chinese private equity fund wishes to invest in the United States, it may not be able to complete an outward direct investment.
In China, legal due diligence in transactions is highly detailed and systematic. Taking the perspective of buy-side counsel for private equity firms as an example, the process includes the following steps:
In addition to business issues, the legal due diligence report will include:
In auction sales, it is relatively common for the seller to provide a due diligence report when the seller is a private equity firm.
As the sell-side legal adviser, one may provide a standard version of the due diligence report (as mentioned in 4.1 General Information), or alternatively, only provide an issue list that includes the principal red-flag issues to the buyer. In such circumstances, the sell-side adviser will not solely rely on this report; in fact, in large transactions, both parties typically place greater reliance on their respective independent due diligence.
Acquisitions by private equity funds are usually conducted in the form of a sale and purchase agreement, with other scenarios being relatively rare.
There are definitely some differences in the acquisition terms between a privately negotiated transaction and an auction sale. However, the key still lies in which party has the stronger bargaining power in the transaction. In an auction sale, the seller is likely to be in a dominant position, as more options enable the seller to be more assertive. For example, the seller might require the buyer to purchase M&A insurance as a precondition for the deal. On the other hand, in a transaction involving a sale and purchase agreement, the buyer’s demands might be greater, such as imposing constraints on liability clauses or setting core conditions for payment.
Private equity funds typically still set up a holding entity to acquire the underlying assets. This holding entity may be established in the Cayman Islands or Singapore. Acquiring the underlying assets through this entity makes it more convenient for co-investors (including limited partners (LPs), the deal team and employees) to participate in the investment.
In the majority of instances, private equity funds will utilise their own capital. The employment of leverage is a rare occurrence and is typically reserved for transactions of substantial magnitude. When leverage is utilised, the purchaser is required to obtain a commitment letter from a financial institution to affirm that its financial position is sound.
When leverage is utilised, the transaction cycle is inevitably extended due to the involvement of bank borrowing. This is particularly disadvantageous for the purchaser in an auction sale, where it faces competition, as a prolonged transaction cycle is a significant drawback. Therefore, in most cases, purchasers will still prefer to utilise their own capital.
The existence of deals involving a consortium of private equity sponsors is acknowledged. However, it is not a frequent occurrence. It is typically observed in the context of large-scale transactions.
Various forms of consideration structure will be used in private equity transactions. Generally, sellers and target companies tend to favour locked-box consideration structures, which, however, impose stricter controls on leakage during the interim period. If the transaction uses closing accounts for pricing, the parties will have their own understandings of the extent of price adjustments. When disputes arise between the parties regarding price adjustments, a clear solution must be in place to stipulate how such adjustments will be made.
Earn-outs, deferred consideration and roll-over structures are common features.
The most notable difference when private equity funds participate in transactions is that, due to their fiduciary duties to their LPs, private equity funds are very cautious about assuming liabilities (including indemnities, guarantees, etc) and typically will not agree to assume such responsibilities during negotiations.
Fixed-price locked-box consideration structures are not commonly utilised in transactions. However, should this mechanism be employed, interest is typically charged.
In transactions where closing accounts are employed for pricing, price adjustments are necessitated. In the event that the parties have divergent understandings of the price adjustment, a clear dispute resolution mechanism is imperative within such a consideration structure. Consequently, the parties engage in negotiations with a high degree of clarity regarding the price adjustment under these circumstances.
Conversely, when fixed-price locked-box consideration structures are utilised, the situation is relatively more favourable, unless significant leakage occurs.
The determination of these matters hinges upon the nature of the transaction in its entirety and the specific circumstances at hand. For instance, apart from mandatory closing conditions, if the parties to an M&A transaction are driven by certain business objectives, additional closing conditions will inevitably be imposed. To illustrate further, in a particular transaction where a portion of the assets cannot be held by the buyer or must be divested for various reasons, the completion of such divestitures will certainly be a prerequisite for closing.
Material adverse change/effect provisions are relatively common. If the interim period between the signing and closing of a transaction is excessively prolonged, there will assuredly be provisions relating to material adverse changes to mitigate risks, preventing the buyer from losing the purpose of acquiring the assets due to significant changes arising from other factors (such as geopolitical considerations). This also serves as a safeguard for exit.
Whether a transaction typically depends on third-party consent also depends on the nature of the target company’s business. For example, for a company with a “business to business” model, where a few major clients play a crucial role in the business, if these major clients are hostile to the acquirer, the business would struggle to operate even after the acquisition. In such cases, the M&A transaction would require the consent of these key third parties.
Accepting a “hell or high water” undertaking is exceedingly rare.
Irrespective of the type of transaction, due to the fiduciary duties owed by private equity firms to their LPs, private equity firms are inherently cautious about assuming liabilities. Even in the face of mandatory regulatory conditions, such as the notification requirements under China’s Anti-Monopoly Law for concentrations of undertakings, private equity firms will not assume an obligation as extreme as “hell or high water”. At most, they may undertake a “best efforts” obligation.
Given that the seller is obligated to sell at a good price, when the seller is in negotiations and another buyer presents a better offer, if the buyer wishes to terminate the original negotiations, they are required to pay a break fee to the original buyer.
Both break fees and reverse break fees are encountered. The amounts ranges from 4% to 10% of the transaction value.
The conditions triggering termination include: (1) the transaction has not been consummated prior to the longstop date; (2) the failure to obtain the required third-party approvals (including those from governmental authorities, shareholders’ meetings, boards of directors, etc); and (3) a material breach by the counterparty.
The specific longstop date is contingent upon the circumstances of the particular transaction, with durations of six months, eight months or 12 months being common.
The allocation of risk is distinct where the seller or buyer is private equity-backed.
Where the seller or buyer is a private equity firm, they are highly cautious about risk and cannot assume excessive liability for indemnification or guarantees. In contrast, where the transaction party is a corporate entity, there is somewhat more flexibility in assuming risk.
Private equity funds generally do not provide representations and warranties, except for fundamental representations/warranties. Whether and how the management team provides representations and warranties depends on whether the representations and warranties provided by the target company and its shareholders are sufficient.
In China, M&A insurance exists in transactions, covering basic warranties and business-related risks, but not tax matters. It is typically provided by insurers.
Litigation is frequently involved, especially in connection with earn-out clauses. In China’s equity investment and financing market, this typically manifests as the invested company and/or its founders being required to repurchase all or part of the equity held by investors at a specified price if the company fails to meet agreed-upon milestones (such as going public or achieving certain performance targets) within the stipulated time frame.
Over the past year, in China’s domestic capital market, transactions involving the change of control of listed companies have been quite active. There are also quite a few transactions supported by private equity funds. However, for a long time, privatisation transactions whereby the acquirer purchases shares of a listed company to cause the shareholding structure to fall below the listing requirements, thereby achieving the purpose of delisting, have been relatively rare.(here, we do not consider non-cash privatisation models such as mergers by absorption, share swaps, etc), and privatisation transactions supported by private equity funds are even rarer, which may be related to the fact that listing status itself is a scarce resource.
According to the listing rules of China’s stock exchanges, in the context of a privatisation transaction, the target company and its board of directors shall strictly comply with a series of legal procedures, including but not limited to:
According to the laws and regulations in China, when an investor and its concert parties’ equity interest in the shares of a listed company reaches 5% of the issued shares of the company, and for each subsequent increase or decrease of 5%, a report on changes in equity interests shall be compiled within three days from the date of occurrence of such fact, and a written report shall be submitted to the China Securities Regulatory Commission and the stock exchange, and the listed company shall be notified and an announcement shall be made. Moreover, within three days from the date of occurrence of such fact, trading of the listed company’s shares shall be suspended.
For private equity-backed bidders, it is critical to note that the aforementioned 5% disclosure threshold refers to the combined shareholding percentage of the bidder and its concert parties (including affiliated private equity funds), encompassing both shares registered under their names and those over which they have de facto voting control despite no formal registration. Failure to adhere to this calculation standard – specifically, if the combined holdings of the bidder and its concert private equity funds reach 5% without fulfilling the requisite disclosure, filing and trading suspension obligations – will result in the portion of shares exceeding 5% being subject to a 36-month voting rights restriction. This could materially adversely affect the overall acquisition plan.
According to the Measures for the Administration of Takeover of Listed Companies (2025 Revision) issued by the China Securities Regulatory Commission, if an acquirer holds 30% or more of the issued shares of a listed company through securities trading on a stock exchange and intends to further increase its shareholding, it shall proceed by way of a mandatory tender offer – either a general offer or a partial offer.
For private equity-backed bidders, when calculating the aforementioned 30% mandatory tender offer threshold, it is crucial to note that shareholdings of affiliated parties may need to be aggregated pursuant to Chinese legal requirements. This includes scenarios where:
Notably, even in the absence of share transfers, if a party grants voting rights to the bidder through a voting rights entrustment arrangement, domestic securities regulators may still aggregate the voting rights entruster’s holdings with those of the bidder for threshold calculation purposes. This could potentially trigger the 30% mandatory tender offer requirement.
Under PRC laws and regulations, in a tender offer transaction, the acquirer must pay the purchase price in cash. Even if the consideration may be paid with transferable securities permitted by law, the acquirer must simultaneously offer cash as an alternative payment option to the shareholders of the target company. In practice, cash has been the predominant payment method in various types of listed company acquisitions in the domestic capital markets.
PRC laws also impose a minimum price requirement for tender offers: the offer price for the same class of shares must not be lower than the highest price paid by the acquirer for such shares during the six-month period preceding the announcement date of the tender offer.
Subject to the procedural requirements for the acquisition of listed companies, the laws and regulatory authorities in China do not actually impose strict restrictions on the acquirer’s use of offer conditions and the establishment of deal protection clauses. However, based on publicly disclosed information, most tender offers do not contain special offer conditions and rarely include deal protection clauses such as break fees, matching rights or force-the-vote provisions.
In the acquisition of Tiamaes Technology, Qiming Venture Capital first signed an agreement in the name of the general partner Suzhou Qihan to lock in the equity, and then completed the fund-raising (Suzhou Qichen) to take over the transaction. The funding came from LPs such as Oriza Holdings (43.48%) and Kunshan State-owned Capital (21.74%), forming a step-by-step process of “agreement signing → fund registration → fund-raising → closing and transfer of ownership”.
This case demonstrates that in the acquisition of domestic listed companies, funds can be raised after the agreement is signed. However, in practice in the domestic capital market, the acquirer generally proves its financial strength before the transaction and does not use obtaining financing as a condition for the offer.
Given the stringent regulatory requirements imposed by the PRC capital markets on the governance structure of listed companies – including but not limited to compliance with the Guidelines for Articles of Association of Listed Companies and the Code of Corporate Governance for Listed Companies – it is challenging for bidders to establish special governance rights within the corporate governance framework beyond securing greater voting influence at the shareholders’ meeting level through mechanisms such as voting rights entrustment, voting rights waiver or concert party arrangements.
In the PRC capital markets, there is no mechanism to push debt down to the target company, nor is there a mandatory squeeze-out mechanism to force minority shareholders to sell their shares. However, under certain specific circumstances, eligible shareholders may request the company to acquire the shares they hold.
In tender offer transactions, it is relatively uncommon for major shareholders of the target company to directly issue irrevocable commitments to accept the offer or pledge their voting rights.
According to PRC laws and regulations, shareholders that intend to accept a tender offer must generally appoint a securities company to handle the pre-acceptance procedures. Such “pre-acceptance” signifies a preliminary expression of intent by the target company’s shareholders to accept the offer. Shareholders that have pre-accepted the offer may appoint a securities company to withdraw their pre-acceptance within three trading days prior to the expiration of the tender offer period. However, if the tender offer period is within the final three trading days before its expiration, pre-accepted shareholders lose the right to withdraw their acceptance. Consequently, if a shareholder receives a more favourable bid, it retains the flexibility to reconsider its decision – provided the withdrawal request is submitted before the tender offer enters its final three trading days.
In private equity transactions, equity incentives for the target company’s management team are common. Specific rights depend on the management team’s future value and participation. Notably, some buyout funds prefer to restructure the management team rather than retain the existing one.
The granting of “sweet equity” is a common practice, typically implemented through the issuance of equity incentives to the management team, often in the form of an Employee Stock Ownership Plan.
For instance, if a member of the management team departs from the company for cause (eg, due to a material breach), their unvested equity interests are typically subject to forfeiture. Conversely, if the departure is not for cause, the vested portion of their equity interests may be retained, while the unvested portion is repurchased at a market-determined fair value.
Such restrictive covenants are generally present, including confidentiality agreements, non-compete clauses, non-solicitation of clients, non-disparagement commitments and intellectual property ownership provisions. These are typically required to be agreed upon and adhered to, and are commonly included as essential terms in the employment contracts of the management team.
From the perspective of a buyout fund, veto rights and significant control over the business are typically not granted to the management team in M&A transactions.
In the context of a control acquisition, private equity funds typically demand a high degree of control over the target company, encompassing the appointment of board seats, the scope of matters requiring approval by the board of directors and the shareholders’ meeting, as well as the hiring and dismissal of senior executives.
In contrast, for minority equity acquisitions or investments, private equity funds generally require only basic investor preferential rights with respect to the target company, such as priority in dividends, priority in liquidation, and repurchase rights.
Generally, private equity funds will not be implicated merely by virtue of being shareholders of a company, unless core personnel of the private equity fund have indeed personally participated in the wrongful conduct of the company.
In addition to equity sales and initial public offerings (IPOs), exit strategies typically encompass two methods: first, exit via M&A; and second, dividend distribution (that is, obtaining cash flow from dividends through well-performing enterprises in terms of operating results).
The dual-track approach is relatively common. On one hand, both investors and the company are actively exploring the feasibility of an IPO. On the other hand, investors also consider selling their stakes when the valuation is favourable.
The triple-track scenario is uncommon. From the company’s perspective, there may be instances where investors sell their existing shares, the company is simultaneously preparing for an IPO, and the company is also accepting investments from other investors. However, it is not common for the same private equity fund to initiate both a sale and a reinvestment concurrently.
Drag rights and tag rights are both common in contractual provisions. In practice, the threshold for exercising drag rights typically requires the consent of more than 75% to 80% of the shareholders. As for tag rights, there is a scenario after corporate financing where, if the founder exits, the investors are required to tag along and sell their shares.
The management team of the target company generally seeks robust exit protections. For institutional investors, they certainly do not wish for a minor shareholder or management to arbitrarily initiate a drag sale of the company. Therefore, they set high barriers for the exercise of drag and tag rights.
The lock-up period arrangements for IPO exits must first comply with the regulations and requirements of the exchange. In China’s A-share market, the controlling shareholders of listed companies are required to have a lock-up period of at least 36 months. For other shareholders, a lock-up period of at least 12 months is mandated. Secondly, in compliance with the regulations, private equity sellers typically agree to a lock-up period of 12 to 24 months.
Both “relationship agreements” and private equity-led IPOs are rare in China.
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inquiry@lifenglaw.com www.lifenglaw.comRequirements on Capital Contribution Under China’s New Company Law
Time limit for capital contribution
The revised Company Law of the People’s Republic of China which came into effect on 1 July 2024 (“New Company Law”) requires shareholders of a limited liability company (LLC) established thereafter to make capital contributions in full within five years from the establishment date of the company, and also requires an LLC established before 1 July 2024 (“Existing LLC”) to adjust its capital contribution schedule in the articles of association (AoA) to meet the new timeline requirement. For capital subscribed in an LLC before 1 July 2024, supplementary rules of the New Company Law generally require that, if the capital contribution deadline for an LLC is later than 30 June 2032, such deadline shall be adjusted to a date no later than 30 June 2032 and the adjustment shall be made before 30 June 2027.
Based on our practice experience, for an Existing LLC whose capital contribution deadline in its AoA is due before 1 July 2024, local market supervision authorities (MSAs) would generally allow the extension of capital contribution timelines, while the new deadline shall also be within five years from the registration date of such amendment for capital contribution deadline in the AoA. For other Existing LLCs whose capital contribution deadlines are not due yet, although supplementary rules allow a deadline as late as 30 June 2032, some MSAs (eg, in Shanghai, Hangzhou) still require such LLCs to adjust the deadline to be within five years from the registration date of such amendment in the AoA. It is suggested for investors to require their portfolio companies to confirm requirements with local MSAs and revise the contribution deadlines according to the new rules respectively.
Potential liabilities for capital contribution in equity transfer
Paragraph 1 of Article 88 of the New Company Law provides that if a shareholder of an LLC transfers its equity with unpaid capital contribution not due yet, the transferee shall assume the capital contribution obligation, but the transferor shall bear supplemental liability if the transferee defaults. The Supreme People’s Court of the People’s Republic of China (SPC) initially provided that Paragraph 1 of Article 88 shall apply to equity transfer before the New Company Law came into effect, which caused lots of disputes in practice. The SPC published an official reply later and clarified that Paragraph 1 of Article 88 shall not be applied to equity transfer disputes before the effective date of the New Company Law and such disputes shall be resolved according to the unrevised Company Law’s principles before 1 July 2024.
For investors planning to transfer equity interest with unpaid capital contribution in an LLC, as the transferor cannot control the act of the transferee, the transferor may elect to complete the capital contribution in advance and the amount for the capital contribution may be added to the transaction price.
Directors’ capital-call duties and potential liabilities
The New Company Law expands directors’ capital-call obligations. It stipulates that the board of directors shall check the shareholders’ capital contributions and issue written payment demands to defaulting shareholders. Directors may be held liable for company losses if they fail to fulfil such obligations.
Directors of companies shall pay special attention to such obligations under the New Company Law. Meanwhile, the investors may require portfolio companies to provide directors’ and officers’ liability insurance for directors appointed by investors, which was not quite normal in the PRC market before.
The Execution Period of the Redemption Rights for Investors
There are divergent views on the nature of redemption rights in the Chinese judicial practice. The “right of formation” theory subjects redemption rights to an exercise period, after which the rights are extinguished, while the “right of claim” theory imposes no such time restraint and holds that the redemption rights are only bound by statutory limitation of action.
On 29 August 2024, an article in the Q&A form addressing the nature and exercise period of redemption rights was published in the People’s Court Daily, which was originally circulated on the SPC’s internal website. The published Q&A held the opinion that the redemption rights are rights of formation subject to a “reasonable period”, and when the “reasonable period” expires, the redemption rights are extinguished. As to the exercise period, the Q&A merely recommends a six-month period and does not prohibit any longer reasonable periods based on specific circumstances. However, as stated in a recent judgment in 2025 by a local court in Beijing, the Q&A is neither legislation nor formal judicial interpretation and the opinion in the Q&A shall not be applied. It is also worth noting that no judgments after the publication of the Q&A are found to treat redemption rights purely as the right of claim (though some of them recognise redemption rights as hybrid rights combining right of formation and the right of claim).
The judicial views on the nature of redemption rights require further observations. For an investor, if the redemption right is triggered in its transaction documents with the investment targets, it is recommended to exercise such right promptly and keep written evidence of the investor’s execution of the right. For portfolio companies or other shareholders, it is suggested to specify a clear exercise period of the redemption right in transaction documents, with an automatic expiration mechanism if it is not exercised.
China’s New Regulations for Overseas Listing Filing – the Second Anniversary Review and Outlook
It has been over two years since 31 March 2023, when the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) promulgated the Trial Measures for the Administration of Overseas Securities Offering and Listing by Domestic Enterprises (the “Trial Measures”), and five supporting rules for regulatory guidance (collectively, the “New Filing Regulations”) came into effect. As the regulatory environment for going public in China’s domestic stock market was tightened in 2024, a large number of Chinese enterprises are seeking opportunities for overseas listing. Against this setting, market players are paying close attention to the practice in implementing the New Filing Regulations, aiming at making the outcome of their relevant decision-making and activities more predicable towards their ultimate goal, that is, successfully obtaining the green light from CSRC for overseas listing. This section reviews the implementation effects of the New Filing Regulations for the past one-and-a-half years since 2024 and hopes to provide some key takeaways.
Overview of implementation practice
According to information published by the CSRC, during the period from 1 January 2024 to 30 June 2025 (“Observation Period”), 195 applicants (excluding those that applied separately for the filing of the “full circulation” of H shares) obtained the filing notice from the CSRC, with 125 for 2024 and 70 for the first half of 2025, respectively.
According to our rough calculation based on publicly available information from the CSRC during the Observation Period, among the 195 applicants that have obtained the filing notice from the CSRC:
Based on our rough estimate, among applicants that have received a filing notice from the CSRC since the implementation of the New Filing Regulations during the Observation Period, the average time from receipt of the filing application by the CSRC to the issuance of the filing notice is nearly seven months, with the minimum and maximum review periods being less than one month and more than 23 months, respectively. During the Observation Period, applications for overseas direct listing appear to have a prominent advantage over applications for overseas indirect listing in terms of the average length of time required (ie, approximately 5.6 months and 7.8 months, respectively); among applications for overseas indirect listing, compared with the filing time of applicants without the VIE structure, which is 7.1 months on average, it would take a longer period for those applicants with the VIE structure (10.7 months on average).
Given the above observations, the reviewing process of CSRC under the New Filing Regulations has slowed down, causing a longer filing period compared with the year 2023 and the first half of 2024 (see our observation in China T&D for Chambers Private Equity 2024), especially for the applicants with the VIE structure. This is primarily because of a rising trend of overseas listings and the continuous increase in the number of filing applications in the markets, leading to a significant increase in the workload of the regulatory authorities, including CSRC. Still, key elements that may influence the speed of the CSRC’s review process include, among others, whether an applicant has adopted or used the VIE structure for overseas listing, and in the case of applicants with the VIE structure, substantial scrutiny from various competent industry-specific authorities could be triggered or involved.
Observation of market trends
During the Observation Period, there were 157 issuers that successfully completed their overseas IPO and listing process (including those that obtained the filing notice from the CSRC in 2023 but completed the overseas IPO and listing process in 2024 and those that obtained the filing notice from the CSRC in 2024 but completed the overseas IPO and listing process in 2025), among which 101 issuers chose to conduct IPOs in the Hong Kong market (39) or de-SPACs (1), while 56 issuers chose to conduct IPOs in the US market (50) or de-SPACs (6). Specifically, among the 101 issuers that have issued shares and been listed in the Hong Kong market, the largest fundraising amount reached approximately HKD35.657 billion, while the smallest was about HKD85 million, and among the 101 issuers that have issued shares and been listed in the US market, the largest fundraising amount reached approximately USD750 million, while the smallest was about USD4.2 million. The scale of the fundraising amounts for most of the said issuers in the Hong Kong market is concentrated in the range of USD20 million to USD100 million, while for most of the said issuers in the US market, their fundraising scale is concentrated in the range of USD5 million to USD10 million. During the first half of 2025, among 70 applicants that obtained the filing notice from the CSRC (excluding 21 applicants that applied separately for the filing of the “full circulation” of H shares), 52 applicants chose the Hong Kong Stock Exchange as the listing exchange, and among 131 applicants whose submission of the filing applications have been accepted by the CSRC (excluding ten applicants that applied separately for the filing of the “full circulation” of H shares), 121 applicants chose the Hong Kong Stock Exchange as the listing exchange. Apparently, at time of writing, the Hong Kong capital market is more attractive to both Chinese enterprises that are seeking overseas listings and international investors that are interested in investing in China-based enterprises than the US capital market or other capital markets around the world.
During the first half of 2025, 35 A-share listed companies announced their intentions to prepare for H-share issuance and listing (far exceeding the number of announcements in 2024 for the entire year); in addition, 11 A-share listed companies received the filing notice from the CSRC for overseas H-share issuance. Based on the response speed of the CSRC regarding the filing for overseas listings, the average filing time for A-to-H projects in Hong Kong was 112 days, which is almost half of the overall average filing time during the same period (ie, 221 days). This demonstrates the supportive attitude of the CSRC towards A-share listed companies issuing shares in Hong Kong, and reflects the positive and effective results achieved through the collaboration between Mainland China and Hong Kong in capital markets.
Issuers with VIE structure: status quo
During the Observation Period, a total of 28 issuers using the VIE structure have successfully obtained filing notices from the CSRC; 20 of these were obtained in 2024 and eight of those were obtained in the first half of 2025, accounting for no more than 25% of the total issuers that chose indirect listing and completed the CSRC filing and no more than 14.5% of the total issuers that completed the CSRC filing, respectively.
The scrutiny on applications with elements of the VIE structure by CSRC and other competent industry-specific authorities is being increasingly tightened, especially for applicants whose operating entities in Mainland China controlled by the VIE structure are engaged in business prohibited for foreign investment by applicable laws and regulations. The above can be seen from a lengthy filing period in 2025: in the first half of 2025, the average filing period for applicants with the VIE structure that completed the CSRC filing was 390 days, which is significantly longer than the average filing time for direct listings or indirect listings without the VIE structure during the same period and is also longer than the filing time for applicants with the VIE structure in history, which is 283 days for 2024.
Based on our observation, issuers with the VIE structure that have completed the CSRC filing are mainly concentrated in the software and information services, internet, data infrastructure, insurance brokage, travel, logistics and medical industries, among others. The main business areas that may involve foreign capital prohibition or restriction include value-added telecommunications, network culture, network publishing, radio and television programme production and operation, surveying and mapping, medical institutions and domestic mail delivery.
Issuers with VIE structure: CSRC perspective and key takeaways
According to the supplementary material requirements for certain issuers published by the CSRC during the Observation Period, the CSRC’s concerns about the VIE structure mainly focus on:
Given the tightened view of the CSRC as well as other regulatory authorities towards applicants with the VIE structure, here are some takeaways:
Observations on PE/VC Exit Routes
IPO: tightened review standards and changes in China’s IPO landscape
An initial public offering (IPO) used to be the primary exit route for most private equity and venture capital firms (“PE/VCs”) in China. However, the CSRC introduced stricter measures in January 2021 by issuing the Provisions on the On-site Inspection of IPO Applicants, which established detailed procedures, methods and requirements for on-site inspection of IPO candidates, marking the start of a more stringent A-share IPO review regime. In April 2024, the State Council issued the Several Opinions of the State Council on Strengthening Regulation to Prevent Risk and Promoting the High-quality Development of the Capital Market, further tightening IPO oversight to enhance risk prevention and overall market quality.
Statistics show that the combined withdrawal-and-rejection rate for A-share IPOs exceeded 50% in both 2021 and 2022. Meanwhile, capital raised through A-share IPOs (domestically listed shares) declined sharply, from CNY586.89 billion in 2022 to CNY356.54 billion in 2023, and further to just CNY67.35 billion in 2024. By 2025, more than 70 companies had withdrawn their IPO applications, while over 300 remained in the CSRC’s review queue. These delays impose higher capital costs and create significant uncertainty regarding fund-level returns for PE/VCs.
However, as A-share IPOs tightened, the Hong Kong IPO market began to recover in the second half of 2024 and rebounded strongly in the first half of 2025. The Hang Seng Index rose by approximately 20% during the first half of 2025. A total of 42 IPOs were completed on the Main Board, raising as much as HKD106.7 billion, reaffirming Hong Kong’s position as a global IPO hub.
Share buyback: quantity is on the rise, but cash recovery rates remain low
Besides an IPO, share buyback is also a potential exit route for PE/VCs in China. Statistics from the Asset Management Association of China indicate that over 90% of PE/VC investment includes share buyback provisions. The main triggering events for investors to exercise their buyback right are the failure to complete a “qualified IPO” and material breach by founders and the target company.
Before 2019, investors rarely requested direct share buyback. However, as IPO review standards have tightened, the number of share buyback cases has increased. But statistics show that in court cases involving share buyback, among cases that enter judicial proceedings, the average recovery rate is only about 6%, and in cases reaching enforcement proceedings, only about 4.62% are fully recovered.
M&A: policy tailwinds, flexible deal structures and shorter timelines may make M&A top in PE/VCs’ new “exit playbook”
Facing challenges with other exit routes, PE/VCs have actively explored alternative strategies. M&A used to be considered as a “second-best option” for PE/VC exits because they often yield lower prices than IPOs and require significant due diligence and negotiations. However, in the current environment, investors are reassessing the value of M&A and increasingly considering them a preferred exit strategy.
Several factors support this shift:
According to PwC’s China M&A 2024 Review and Outlook, China’s M&A deal volume fell to a multi-year low in 2024, down 16% from 2023 to USD277 billion. However, from late 2024 onwards, the market has received continuous policy support, and M&A deal value in the second half of 2024 jumped by one-third compared with the first half, reaching USD158 billion. In the first half of 2025, a total of 171 PE/VCs successfully exited through M&A transactions, with capital returned to funds surging to CNY43.065 billion.
Despite the above advantages of M&A transactions, certain legal issues may need to be considered regarding the design of the deal structure of the M&A transactions. For example:
In conclusion, while China’s PE/VC exit landscape faces challenges such as stricter IPO reviews and low share buyback recovery rates, the growing policy support and structural advantages of M&A transactions offer a relatively promising alternative. With the entry of patient capital, the transformation of institutional investment strategies and the regularisation of the market environment, we believe that China’s M&A market will continue to develop, and M&A transactions will be not just an exit route but, more importantly, a way to re-create and release value.
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