ZTE Resumes Trading After Paying US Fine, Investors Wipe Off $3 Billion in Market Value

ZTE Resumes Trading After Paying US Fine, Investors Wipe Off $3 Billion in Market Value
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Chinese telecommunications giant ZTE Corp had about $3 billion (roughly Rs. 20,300 crores) wiped off its market value as it resumed trade on Wednesday after agreeing to pay up to $1.4 billion (roughly Rs. 9,400 crores) in penalties to the US government.

China's No. 2 telecommunications equipment maker was crippled when a seven-year supplier ban was imposed on the company in April for breaking a 2017 agreement reached after it was caught illegally trading with Iran and North Korea.

The ban, which has prevented ZTE from buying the US components it relies on to make smartphones and other devices, will not be lifted until ZTE pays a fine and places $400 million (roughly Rs. 2,700 crores) more in an escrow account in a US-approved bank.

The Hong Kong-listed shares of ZTE slid as much as 41 percent to HKD 14.98, their lowest in a year, following a two-month trading suspension, while its Shenzhen shares fell by their 10 percent limit after it confirmed details of the agreement publicised by the US government on Monday.

Hong Kong's benchmark Hang Seng index was down 0.5 percent in early trade.

Confirming details of the deal, ZTE said late on Tuesday it would replace its board of directors and that of its import-export subsidiary ZTE Kangxun within 30 days of the June 8 order being signed by the United States.

All members of its leadership at or above the senior vice president level would be removed within the 30-day period, with a commitment that they would not be re-hired, along with any executives or officers tied to the wrongdoing, it said.

It also said in filings on Tuesday that it would work to resume operations as soon as possible after the ban gets lifted, and would republish its first-quarter financial results after assessing the impact of the ban and the settlement agreement.

The case has become highly politicised and a key focus of bargaining talks as Washington and Beijing look to avert a trade war.

US lawmakers have attacked Washington's agreement with ZTE and plan legislation to roll it back, citing intelligence warnings that ZTE poses a national security threat.

ZTE, with a market value of around $20 billion (roughly Rs. 1.35 lakh crores) before its shares were suspended in April, is the world's fourth-largest telecom equipment maker after Huawei Technologies, Ericsson, and Nokia.

© Thomson Reuters 2018

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Further reading: Telecom, ZTE, China, Hong Kong
Samsung, LG Set to Bring Full-Screen, Sound Emitting Smartphones Next Year: Report
US Lawmakers Push to Restore Penalties on ZTE Despite Reprieve
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