NYSE scraps plan to delist shares of Chinese telecom giants
Shares of China Mobile, China Telecom and Unicom rallied on the latest development, rising more than 6 per cent in Hong Kong trading.

The New York Stock Exchange said it will no longer delist China’s three biggest state-owned telecommunications companies, backtracking on a plan that had threatened to escalate tensions between the world’s largest economies.
NYSE’s U-turn came just four days after the exchange said it would remove shares of China Mobile Ltd., China Telecom Corp. and China Unicom Hong Kong Ltd. to comply with a US executive order. NYSE cited “consultation with relevant regulatory authorities” in a brief statement late Monday announcing the reversal.
Shares of China Mobile, China Telecom and Unicom rallied on the latest development, rising more than 6 per cent in Hong Kong trading. Calls and emails to the companies weren’t immediately returned Tuesday.

The move to delist the shares had heightened concerns about tit-for-tat sanctions on Chinese and American companies. The former have turned to the US stock market for capital and international prestige for more than two decades, raising at least $144 billion from some of the world’s largest investors. Wall Street banks are particularly keen to see a ratcheting down of tensions after gaining unprecedented scope to operate in China last year.
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