Wind power firm
in line for IPO
Jun 21, 2006 - China Daily
Author(s): Wang Ying
China's second-biggest maker of wind-power generators, Zhejiang
Windey Wind Generating Engineering Co Ltd, is in talks with investors to
raise 200 million yuan (US$25 million) in an initial public offering
(IPO) in the next two years.
"We are talking with several potential investors such as Citibank and
Shanghai-based Lianchuang Investment Management Co for a public float in
either the domestic or overseas market," a senior executive with
Zhejiang Windey told China Daily yesterday.
"We expect to increase our capital from the current 100 million yuan
(US$12.5 million) to 300 million yuan (US$37.5 million) through the
listing," added the official, who declined to be identified.
The company expects to come up with a detailed plan elaborating on
the proposed IPO in a couple of months, he added.
Meanwhile, the firm's competitor, China's biggest homegrown
manufacturer of wind power equipment, Goldwind Science and Technology Co
Ltd, is also talking with Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank
and Citigroup, hoping to get them on board as financial advisers ahead
of a US listing, Reuters cited its Chairman Wu Gang as saying yesterday.
Goldwind expects to chalk up 1.2 billion yuan (US$150 million) in
revenue this year after more than 500 million yuan (US$62.5 million) in
2005, the report said.
The Windey official yesterday disclosed that the Zhejiang-based
company aims to sell 100 sets of 750-kilowatt wind-power generators and
realize sales of 300 million yuan (US$37.5 million) next year.
China Energy Conservation Investment Corp, the nation's flagship
State-owned company for renewable energy development, yesterday took a
47.5 per cent stake in Zhejiang Windey.
The Beijing-based new energy company paid over 40 million yuan (US$5
million) to Zhejiang Machinery and Electrical Group in East China, which
completely owned Windey before the transaction.
After the acquisition, Zhejiang Machinery's shares in Windey were
reduced to 47.5 per cent, with the remaining 5 per cent equally split
between senior management and technical engineers, said Wang Yi, a
senior official from China Energy Conservation.
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