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Red Chips
and the globalisation of China's enterprises
 
Charles de Trenck
 Simon Cartledge
 Anil Daswani
 Christian A Katz
 David Sakmar

ISBN: 962-7160-64-4
Dimensions: 215 pp, 200 x 140 mm
Price: HK$250/US$31

"[L]ess expensive than many books published on China business, Red Chips provides enough in the way of facts and figures to be a useful resource...[on] the structures and operations of China's conglomerates."

Finance Asia

 
Red Chips analyses leading Chinese companies and their operating environment in China during the 1990s. In China, it is governmental organisations that determine the formation of corporate structures. These government-backed Chinese companies often follow a trail that leads back to foreign equity markets, particularly Hong Kong's stock exchange.

The examination of the companies examined by the book is a first in the English language. Coverage of China's economic and corporate environment has been restricted to scholarly studies targeting periods distant enough for most of the data to be no longer applicable, or by contemporary media with attention focussing on current events.

Red Chips bridges the two main types of China coverage and provides both the current context of China's reforms and the content of in-depth analysis of several of China's leading companies. Special focus is placed on the CITIC group of companies, with analysis of both CITIC Beijing and CITIC Pacific. Additionally, particular attention is paid to the Guangdong Enterprises group of companies. Forming part of the backdrop for the analysis of China's budding corporations is also an overview of China's banking system and its relationship to Chinese enterprises and finally the historic role of the steel industry illustrates the problems of separating state planning and management issues.

The second edition, 1998, includes a new epilogue and analysis of the current Asian financial crises, and the implications for the future of red chip companies.

Critics Comments

"While the locally [Hong Kong] listed companies of Chinese government operations are becoming more organised in their business strategies, their mainland-based holding companies are still an amorphous blob with grey areas which cast a shadow over the credibility of their flagship listed vehicles.

"This concern is raised in a new book, Red Chips and the globalisation of China's enterprises, by Credit Suisse First Boston analyst Charles de Trenck.

"Thought to be the first of its kind, Red Chips deals with the history of the corporatisation process on the mainland. Chapters are devoted to such prototypes as Citic Beijing and Citic Pacific, and other leading companies.

"It deals with the complex structures around which listed entities are formed and operate, and focuses on the links to the state banking sector.

"'I was working for a European bank and covering a lot of Chinese companies, the large red chips and Chinese enterprises,' Mr de Trenck said. 'The motivation for me doing this book was working on these files and realising that they contained a lot of information that wasn't available for general discussion. So I decided spend my spare time on the analysis of these companies.'

"I realised that for a lot of companies I was looking at, the information on the listed companies tended to be more user-friendly, more neatly presented, whereas the holding companies that I had worked on on the banking side tended to be more disparate, more the type of sprawling conglomerate. That's how companies such as Guangdong Enterprises began...as representatives or holding companies for the regional governments.

"We tried to understand the relationship between the parent and the listed companies."

Mark Sharp, South China Morning Post

"The main questions addressed in Red Chips and the globalisation of China's enterprises are: if the red chips are the best China has to offer, how do the companies rate in global terms, and what, if anything, is holding them back?

"Editor Charles de Trenck and contributors Simon Cartledge, Anil Daswani, Christian A Katz and David Sakmar converge on the topic from several sides, bringing their own particular expertise to bear on discussions of individual companies, the Chinese banking system, specific banks, and that most achetypal and historically resonant of Chinese industries, steel production.

"They provide short profiles of 17 conglomerates, a longer investigation of three companies with contrasting styles of management – Cosco, Shougang and China Resources – a chapter each on Citic Beijing and Citic Pacific and a chapter on Guangdong Enterprises and Guangdong Investment.

"The longer profiles explore the way in which, to varying degrees, the political loyalties of the parent companies have constrained their growth and continue to influence the business decisions of their listed subsidiaries.

"Though small, and considerably less expensive than many books published on China business, Red Chips provides enough in the way of facts and figures to be a useful resource for anyone seeking to find out about the structures and operations of China's conglomerates.

"It is encrusted with handy charts and graphs, and includes diagrams which are invaluable in helping to untangle the often involved structures of conglomerates consisting of numerous almost identically named companies which are perpetually buying and selling bits of each other."

Lucy Benson, Finance Asia

"Are red chips still worthwhile investments? The new book Red Chips answers the question. If the companies are focussed in their business, and profit-driven, as any other companies that are successful in the rest of the world, an investor can determine if they represent good value. Good management accomplishes good business and good business can be evaluated on productive merit.

"Charles de Trenck argues – in the first chapter on Chinese capitalism and Chinese companies and a second chapter on the growth of China's key conglomerates – that most of them shall have to restructure because a majority are unfocused and directionless.

"The story of the Chinese banking system is well described in Christian Katz' overview in the chapter "Financing Chinese conglomerates".

"CITIC Pacific is presented in its own chapter by Anil Daswani; its parent CITIC Beijing by Simon Cartledge.

"Chapter 7 by de Trenck tells the story of Guangdong Enterprises and Guangdong Investment. Not surprisingly he concludes that the 'principal challenge ahead for the listed company is to develop hands-on skills over its existing subsidiaries' and a key to its success is 'how seriously management deals with cash flow and its significant number of problem businesses'.

"'There is little capitalism...at work in China at present' writes de Trenck in his epilogue. Some companies, however, distinguish themselves by virtue of good management (not by pattern of ownership) and organisational structure and do therefore represent good value. He lists CITIC Pacific, China Resources, and COSCO."

Bjorn H Jernudd, Dragon News
(Swedish Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong)

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Copyright © Charles de Trenck, Simon Cartledge, Anil Daswani, Christian A Katz & David Sakmar

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