The average time from filing to listing of 20 successful listed banks is 8 10.05 days (about 27 months), of which the average time from filing to pre-disclosure is 469.7 days (about 16 months), and the average time from pre-disclosure to listing is 154. 1 day (.
The listing time of 20 listed banks varies from 175 days to 13 18 days. Among them, banks with a queuing time of 2-3 years account for 75%.
The Postal Savings Bank took the shortest time from filing to listing, only 175 days, and it was successful in about half a year, far below the average level. The bank that took the longest time was Chengdu Bank, which took 13 18 days from filing to listing. Queued for nearly 4 years and successfully landed in the capital market on 20 18 and 1.
From the perspective of the listed sector, there is not much time difference between the small and medium-sized board and the main board. The average time from filing to listing of six banks listed on small and medium-sized board is 850 days (about 28 months). The average time from filing to listing of 14 banks listed on the main board is 793 days (about 26 months), which is two months less than that of banks listed on the small and medium-sized board.
Extended data
Types of new share issuance
1. Non-capital increase issuance and capital increase issuance
Non-capital-increased issuance refers to the issuance of shares after the establishment of the company to raise sufficient capital based on the authorized capital system and the total capital limit stipulated in the articles of association. Since this share-trading issue does not increase the company's capital, it is a non-capital increase issue. Capital increase and issuance refers to the company's issuance of shares for the purpose of capital increase.
2. Public offering and non-public offering
Public offering refers to public offering of shares; Non-public offering, also known as directional offering, refers to the issuance of shares with a specific subject as the subscription object. The procedure of public offering is stricter than that of non-public offering.
3. General problems and special problems
The usual issuance is the issuance of new shares for the purpose of capital increase; The purpose of special issuance is not to increase capital, but to distribute surplus, convert reserve fund into share capital or convert convertible corporate bonds into share capital.
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