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British Prime Minister Gordon Brown cuts
a ribbon for the opening of a representative office of the London Stock
Exchange in Beijing Friday, Jan. 18, 2008. The LSE has stepped up
competition with American-based markets to attract listings from the
growing number of Chinese companies that are expanding abroad. (Photo:
Shanghai Daily) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, Jan. 18 (Xinhua) -- The London Stock
Exchange (LSE) opened a representative office here on Friday with the goal of
attracting listings of rapidly growing Chinese companies.
Two U.S. rivals -- the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
and NASDAQ -- opened Beijing offices in December.
The LSE is the gateway for Chinese companies wanting
to get into the euro zone and the market is cost-effective, said Clara Furse,
the LSE's chief executive officer.
Strict listing requirements would help Chinese companies
improve their corporate governance and management, Furse added.
Chinese companies could seek partners in Europe and
other regions of the world through the LSE, said Jiang Nan, representative of
the LSE's Beijing office.
Seventeen Chinese companies raised 1.9 billion U.S.
dollars through London listings last year. To date, 68 Chinese firms in 20
sectors, including manufacturing, services, and clean technology, have listed on
the bourse.
"The LSE does not focus on any special sector. We
have an open mind," said Furse. She added that several Chinese companies were
preparing for LSE listings.
The LSE applied to the China Securities Regulatory
Commission for the establishment of the office late last year and gained
approval early this month.
Stock exchanges in Japan, Singapore and the Republic
of Korea have also gained regulatory approval to open China offices.
The Singapore Stock Exchange has said it would open
its Beijing office early this year.
China, UK aim for $60 bln of bilateral
trade by 2010
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Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao (R) shakes
hands with visiting British Prime Minister Gordon Brown in Beijing, China,
Jan. 18, 2008,during a ceremony in honor of Gordon Brown. (Xinhua
Photo) Photo Gallery>>>
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BEIJING, Jan. 18 (Xinhua) -- China and the United
Kingdom (UK) had agreed to target 60 billion U.S. dollars worth of annual
bilateral trade by 2010, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said here on
Friday.
The target was set by Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao and
the visiting British leader, who arrived here early on Friday for an official
visit. Full story
China's Wen, British PM begin talks on
"comprehensive strategic partnership
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Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao (L) hosts a
welcoming ceremony for visiting British Prime Minister Gordon Brown in
Beijing, China, Jan. 18, 2008. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>>
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BEIJING, Jan. 18 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Premier Wen
Jiabao began talks with visiting British Prime Minister Gordon Brown here Friday
morning at the Great Hall of the People, after a red-carpet welcome ceremony.
Diplomats said that Wen and Brown will discuss a
so-called Sino-British "comprehensive strategic partnership," and issues
concerning bilateral cooperation on trade and investment, education and
academia, climate changes and environment as well as Olympics cooperation, and
other regional and world issues. Full story
Interview: China-UK relationship is
"better than ever"
LONDON, Jan. 15 (Xinhua) -- The comprehensive strategic
relationship between Britain and China is "better than ever," British Prime
Minister Gordon Brown said Tuesday.
"Over the past few years we have seen a steady
increase in cooperation in some areas, and a quite dramatic change in others. On
trade, education or cultural exchanges we're working more closely with China
than ever before. And on international issues, whether working together to
resolve major conflicts or to tackle climate change, we have a closer dialogue
now than we have ever had," Brown said in a written interview with
correspondents of Xinhua News Agency and the People's Daily based in
London. Full story