Air China's debut on the Hong Kong and London stock markets
Wednesday can be seen as a signal of deepening aviation reform,
which changed from increasing aviation efficiency to redefining the
ownership, said Chen Liran, an aviation insider.
China's huge potential in aviation is well-recognized. The stock
price of China Southern and China Eastern rose 30 percent in
November despite a plane crash and China Aviation Oil company
scandal. The market value of China Southern reached about 1.7
billion US dollars and that of China Eastern reached some one
billion US dollars. After Air China's Initial Public Offering
(IPO), its market value will surpass 2.5 billion US dollars.
Several airlines listed earlier, including Hainan Airlines,
Shenzhen Airlines and Xiamen Airlines, made profits after their
IPOs as well.
"Apart from the fact that they can collect more money on the
market, the most crucial thing for these airlines is that they all
become public companies," acknowledged Liu Yongtao, a Chinese
aviation expert.
Experts hold that the goal of aviation reform is to make profit
for state-owned companies.
The debut of flag carrier Air China and the recent investment of
Cathay Pacific to Air China signifies that China's aviation
industry planned to strengthen public supervision on airline
companies, according to experts.
Air China will release its fiscal report on operation
performance to all investors after its IPO, and the market will
judge its achievements by raising or lowering the stock price.
(Xinhua News Agency December 17, 2004)