(Lido) 12 - 07 - 17 Chinese Companies and The VIE Structure
(Lido) 12 - 07 - 17 Chinese Companies and The VIE Structure
(Lido) 12 - 07 - 17 Chinese Companies and The VIE Structure
Foreword
Over the last 18 years, an increasing number of Chinese companies have listed on U.S.
exchanges relying heavily on a corporate structure called a variable interest entity (VIE).
A VIE is an entity controlled by a company by means other than a majority of voting
rights. 1
These marketplace developments make it appropriate to revisit and highlight the riskiness
of VIEs. While some Chinese companies list on U.S. exchanges without VIE structures
and others with VIEs list on exchanges outside the United States, this study focuses
particularly on Chinese companies using VIE structures with primary listings on U.S.
exchanges.
The VIE structure is common among Chinese companies seeking foreign investment,
including internet giants like Sina—which in 2000 became the first U.S.-listed Chinese
company using a VIE—and Alibaba, which in 2014 made the largest IPO in history. But
VIEs are fraught with complexity and risk for investors, including vulnerability to
Chinese government pressures and management conflicts of interest. The VIE structure
could be deemed to contravene Chinese laws that restrict foreign investment in
strategically sensitive industries. VIEs operate using contractual arrangements rather than
direct ownership, leaving foreign investors without the rights to residual profits or control
over the company’s management that they would otherwise enjoy through equity
ownership.
1 Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) FIN 46R provides guidance on consolidation of VIEs. FIN
46 is an interpretation of US GAAP that was designed to make it difficult to remove assets and liabilities from
a company’s balance sheet if the company has economic exposure to the assets and liabilities,
notwithstanding lack of majority voting control. The use by Enron of special purpose entities to hide certain
liabilities was an important factor prompting development of the FASB interpretation. See
http://www.fasb.org/jsp/FASB/Document_C/DocumentPage?cid=1175801627792&acceptedDisclaimer=true
2 Deirdre Bosa, “Alibaba vs Amazon: The Race to $500 billion,” CNBC, September 1, 2017,
https://www.cnbc.com/2017/09/01/alibaba-vs-amazon-the-race-to-500-billion.html.
2
Buyer Beware: Chinese Companies and the VIE Structure
While VIEs have established themselves as common practice among U.S.-listed Chinese
companies and have won some validation from market actors 3, the structure puts public
shareholders in a perilous position. VIEs depend heavily on executives who are Chinese
nationals and own the underlying business licenses to operate in China, introducing
unusually significant “key person” succession risk. Aside from dual-class structures with
limited shareholder rights in the Cayman Islands and other jurisdictions in which these
companies are often incorporated, the VIE structures themselves create significant
management conflicts of interest, complicating, if not foreclosing, the ability of outside
shareholders to challenge executives for poor decisionmaking, weak management, or
equity-eroding actions. VIEs lead foreign investors to believe that they can meaningfully
participate in China’s emerging companies, but such participation is precarious and may
ultimately prove illusory.
Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) screens covered M&A transactions for
threats to national security on a case-by-case basis. In bilateral investment treaties (BITs), the U.S. and
3
Buyer Beware: Chinese Companies and the VIE Structure
To secure a MOFCOM business license, ownership of the VIE must remain in Chinese
hands, often with the company’s founder. The owner and VIE then establish an
intermediary, the WFOE, with which they enter into a series of contractual arrangements.
These contracts model control without granting direct equity ownership. Since the WFOE
neither directly owns the VIE nor owns any assets that are restricted from foreign
investment, it does not require a MOFCOM license and may receive foreign investment.
other countries establish a “negative list” of sectors in which foreign investment is restricted, prohibited, or
based on reciprocity. See “Summary of US negative Lists in BITs,” The US-China Business Council, 2014,
https://www.uschina.org/sites/default/files/Negative%20list%20summary.pdf.
7 Samuel Farrell Ziegler, “China’s Variable Interest Entity Problem: How Americans Have Illegally Invested
Billions in China and How to Fix It,” The George Washington University Law Review, Vol. 84, No. 2, March
2016, 539-561, http://www.gwlr.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/84-Geo.-Was.-L.-Rev.-539.pdf.
4
Buyer Beware: Chinese Companies and the VIE Structure
name as the Chinese VIE, obscuring the reality that investors purchase depositary shares
of a shell company with a third-tier relationship to the lucrative VIE. 8 (See Figure 1
below.)
Outside China
Inside China
License
8 As an example of this VIE-WFOE-ListCo structure applied to a real company, consider ZTO Express, the
largest IPO on a U.S. exchange in 2016. The ListCo is ZTO Express (Cayman) Inc., which along with other
subsidiaries is connected to China-based Shanghai Zhongtongji Network Technology Co., Ltd., the WFOE,
which is contractually connected to the VIE/OpCo ZTO Express Co., Ltd. See
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1677250/000104746916016357/a2230086z424b4.htm.
5
Buyer Beware: Chinese Companies and the VIE Structure
The contractual arrangements that connect the ListCo and its WFOE to the Chinese VIE
and its owner play a central role in facilitating the flow of foreign capital into the
restricted industry. The contracts imitate ownership in function and form without granting
investors direct equity ownership of the Chinese VIE. The contracts generally include the
following characteristics:
• A loan agreement and equity pledge agreement whereby the WFOE provides
an interest-free loan to the VIE’s owner to capitalize the VIE. In exchange, the
VIE serves as collateral for the loan as the owner pledges all of its assets and
liabilities to the WFOE.
• A call option agreement between the VIE and WFOE that provides the latter a
right to purchase the VIE at a pre-determined price, usually the amount of the
loan agreement.
• The VIE’s founders give the WFOE power of attorney, granting it shareholder
rights such as voting, attending shareholder meetings and submitting shareholder
proposals.
• A technical services agreement designates the WFOE as the exclusive provider
of services like consulting and fulfillment to the VIE. This justifies the equity
pledge agreement that entitles the WFOE to the VIE’s earnings. The entities may
also sign an asset licensing agreement whereby the VIE pays the WFOE
royalties for assets like intellectual property licensing. 9
Together, these contracts theoretically provide the WFOE rights over the VIE that a
traditional parent company would have over its subsidiary through ownership. Because
the WFOE assumes both the economic costs and benefits of the VIE and the ListCo
directly owns the WFOE, U.S. accounting rules may require the ListCo to consolidate the
VIE on its financial statements despite the absence of equity ownership. 10 These
consolidated financial statements, along with the contractual arrangements, supply the
glue that holds the VIE structure together. They enable the ListCo, a shell company with
no meaningful operations of its own, to attract foreign investors who provide capital to
what they might think is an emerging Chinese company.
9 Paul Gillis, “Accounting Matters: Variable Interest Entities in China,” Forensic Asia, September 18, 2012,
http://www.chinaaccountingblog.com/vie-2012septaccountingmatte.pdf.
10 FASB Interpretation No. 46R provides that “An enterprise that consolidates a VIE is the primary
beneficiary of the VIE. The primary beneficiary of a VIE is the party that absorbs a majority of the entity’s
expected losses, receives a majority of its expected residual returns, or both, as a result of holding variable
interests, which are the ownership, contractual, or other pecuniary interests…” See note 1.
6
Buyer Beware: Chinese Companies and the VIE Structure
VIE Risks
Substantial legal uncertainties surround these contractual arrangements since their
purpose is to circumvent Chinese law. A threshold concern is whether they are
enforceable at all should a dispute arise between the WFOE, its investors, and the VIE.
Chinese contract law dims the prospects for their enforceability as it invalidates any
contract that conceals an illegal purpose under the guise of legitimate acts. 11
Moreover, each individual contract could theoretically violate Chinese law. First, the
WFOE can only legally provide a loan to the VIE’s owner if loans are within the
WFOE’s MOFCOM-sanctioned business scope. Second, since the VIE operates in a
restricted industry, the WFOE—being foreign-owned—cannot exercise the call option
without transferring it to a Chinese-owned entity. Finally, a services agreement for which
the VIE pays 100% of its earnings to another company could raise regulators’ eyebrows
and incur tax penalties.
The VIE structure consequently deprives foreign investors of vital legal protections they
would otherwise enjoy through equity ownership. Three risks arise as a result:
government enforcement, owner expropriation, and punitive taxation. Although foreign
investors have not experienced a fully confiscatory action, they have suffered devaluation
of their investments as a result of the VIE structure in a number of cases.
Government Enforcement
Sina, the owner of China’s version of Twitter, pioneered the VIE structure with its IPO in
2000. Since then, more than 150 Chinese companies of various sizes and industries using
VIEs went public on U.S. exchanges. 12 By retaining a Chinese owner, these companies
assure regulators that they remain under Chinese ownership and control while
simultaneously telling foreign investors the exact opposite through their publicly traded
ListCo. 13 Despite this contradiction and the questionable legality of the VIE structure,
MOFCOM has largely tolerated their existence by declining to enforce its own
restrictions. U.S.-listed VIEs essentially operate on a precarious assumption that
MOFCOM will continue to allow the VIE structure to funnel foreign capital into
restricted industries.
11 See Contract Law of the People’s Republic of China, Chapter III, Article 52(3),
http://www.npc.gov.cn/englishnpc/Law/2007-12/11/content_1383564.htm.
12 This figure is current as of this writing and includes companies that went public and have since delisted.
7
Buyer Beware: Chinese Companies and the VIE Structure
Exceptions to the Chinese government’s tacit approval exist. In 1998, the government
abruptly prohibited a corporate structure similar to VIEs that it had previously tolerated.
Companies used this structure, called China-China-Foreign (CCF), “to facilitate foreign
investment in violation of MOFCOM’s Catalogue prohibitions—just as VIEs do
today.” 14 The telecommunications companies that predominantly employed this structure
were forced to unwind their holdings at a substantial loss to shareholders. The
government separately interfered again in 2011, when provincial authorities advised
Baosheng Steel that its control agreements “contravene current Chinese management
policies related to foreign-invested enterprises and, as a result, are against public policy.”
Baosheng Steel was a Chinese VIE planning to go public on the Nasdaq through Buddha
Steel, its Cayman Islands ListCo. In response to the adverse advisory, Buddha Steel
withdrew its proposed IPO, transferred all payments and assets to the VIE, terminated its
contractual arrangements with Baosheng, and became a shell company. 15
These precedents underscore the risk of the Chinese government at any time enforcing
MOFCOM’s Catalogue and ordering Chinese companies to terminate their contracts with
the WFOE. Short of dismantling VIEs, however, the government could also use the threat
of enforcement to compel companies to take actions favorable to Beijing at the expense
of shareholders. In 2015, MOFCOM stoked fears by issuing a draft Foreign Investment
Law that includes “the ability to exercise decisive influence over a company by way of
contractual arrangements” in the definition of control for designating foreign investment
enterprises. 16 Since issuing the draft for public comment, MOFCOM has not made any
progress in advancing the law. If implemented, however, this policy change could
proscribe the VIE structure that nearly 100 publicly traded Chinese companies employ.
Owner Expropriation
In addition to the risk of adverse government action, the Chinese owner of the VIE could
decide to breach the contractual arrangements and expropriate the company’s earnings.
Investors own shares of the Cayman Islands ListCo while the company’s real assets
reside in the Chinese VIE where courts are unlikely to enforce the contracts. Because the
value of the ListCo derives from its ability to consolidate the Chinese VIE on its financial
14 Ziegler, “China’s VIE Problem,” at 552: “Like the VIEs of today, the CCF was technically illegal, but (at
least initially) tacitly permitted by authorities.”
15 See Buddha Steel Form 8-K, March 28, 2011,
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1367777/000114420411017680/v216334_8k.htm.
16 “Foreign Investment Law of the People’s Republic of China (Draft for Comments),” Jones Day, (Unofficial
English Translation),
https://www.uschina.org/sites/default/files/2015%20Draft%20Foreign%20Investment%20Law%20of%20the
%20People%27s%20Republic%20of%20China_JonesDay_0.pdf.
8
Buyer Beware: Chinese Companies and the VIE Structure
statements, losing the VIE as a result of breached contracts (or government enforcement)
would significantly devalue shareholders’ investments.
Before Alibaba went public in 2014, it constructed a VIE structure to court foreign
investment from Softbank and Yahoo, which purchased a 43% stake. Under the structure,
Alibaba’s WFOE contained the operations for Alipay, a leading online payment platform
in China. After failing to secure a license for Alipay from the Chinese government
because of its foreign ownership, founder Jack Ma abruptly spun off Alipay from Alibaba
in 2011, taking control himself allegedly without consulting shareholders. Yahoo, no
longer able to include Alipay’s profits on its own financial statements, ultimately
brokered a deal with Ma that entitled Alibaba to up to $6 billion from the proceeds of any
future Alipay IPO or sale. 17 That figure, however, represents a 62.5% devaluation of
Yahoo’s stake in Alipay had it remained fully under Alibaba’s control.
A year before the Alibaba drama, Nasdaq-listed GigaMedia, a diversified ListCo with
multiple VIEs in China, lost control of one of its VIEs, T2CN. A T2CN executive seized
the company’s business license and financial documents upon discovering that the
ListCo’s shareholders wanted to remove him. 18 Since these financial “chops” facilitate
the contractual arrangements, this maneuver paralyzed the VIE structure and
dispossessed Gigamedia of its right to control and profit from T2CN. Since T2CN was
one of GigaMedia’s several VIEs, its loss represented a 20% devaluation of GigaMedia’s
revenues rather than a full 100%. Gigamedia never regained control, ultimately selling its
ownership of T2CN’s WFOE and settling with the rogue executive. 19
While no publicly traded company with a VIE has entirely collapsed due to government
enforcement or owner expropriation, the CCF, Buddha Steel, Alibaba, and GigaMedia
cases illustrate that significant investment devaluation in VIEs is a palpable risk.
17 Liana Baker, “Yahoo gets short end of stick in Alibaba deal,” Reuters, July 29, 2011,
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-yahoo-alibaba/yahoo-gets-short-end-of-stick-in-alibaba-deal-
idUSTRE76S2QN20110729.
18 In China, these financial documents—including the company seals, business registration certificates,
financial data, and licensing arrangements—are known as the company’s “chops” and are indispensable to
operating a business in China. See Ziegler, “China’s VIE Problem,” at 549.
19 “GigaMedia Announces Sale of T2CN, All T2CN Litigation Resolved,” December 14, 2011,
9
Buyer Beware: Chinese Companies and the VIE Structure
Punitive Taxation
The invalidation of the contractual arrangements in cases of enforcement or expropriation
is not the only source of investment devaluation. Vulnerability to punitive taxation also is
a concern. Even if the contracts function as intended, the potential for punitive tax
treatment in China raises questions about the ListCo’s consolidated financial statements.
In theory, the VIE should pay all of its earnings to the WFOE under the terms of the
services contract in order to model direct ownership. The ListCo could in turn extract the
profits from China since it directly owns the WFOE. Chinese companies conducting IPOs
in the United States generally advertise this arrangement in their Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) filings to justify their consolidated financial statements and attract
foreign investors. 20
Accounting firms rely on this arrangement, substantiated by a legal opinion that Chinese
law firms issue affirming the functionality and enforceability of the contracts, when
preparing the ListCo’s financial statements. Regardless of when or how the VIE pays its
earnings to the WFOE, the financial statements should reflect the service payment as an
expense of the VIE and income to the WFOE. The receivables and payables between the
various entities are eliminated in consolidation, but the financial statements should
arguably reflect—or at least disclose—the potential taxation applicable to the payments.
In China, the VIE’s earnings are subject to an average 8.5% value added tax (VAT) from
the outset. 21 The VIE should then pay the remaining 91.5% of its earnings to the WFOE.
Due to the VIE structure’s questionable legality, tax treatment after the VAT is less clear
and determined by the Chinese State Administration of Taxation. In a hypothetical but
potentially realistic scenario, Paul Gillis, editor of the China Accounting Blog, argues
that the administration could consider the VIE payment a dividend to the VIE’s Chinese
owner who then transfers it to the WFOE. 22 This formulation would subject the VIE
owner to a 20% individual income tax and the WFOE to a 25% corporate income tax.
When the WFOE pays the rest to the ListCo, extracting the profits from China, the
20 Common language from SEC filings states, “We entered into a series of contractual arrangements with
[our VIE] and its shareholders, which enable us to receive substantially all of the economic benefits from our
consolidated affiliates,” See RISE Education (Cayman) Ltd. Form F-1, October 18, 2017,
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1712178/000119312517312619/d414107df1a.htm.
21 China’s VAT was implemented in 2016 and uses multiple rates. For example, many services including
financial services are taxed at 6% and construction and real estate are taxed at 11%. See “China’s new VAT
rates and rules,” KPMG China Tax Alert, March 2016,
https://assets.kpmg.com/content/dam/kpmg/pdf/2016/03/china-tax-alert-09-vat-implementation-rules.pdf.
22 Paul Gillis, “Accounting for VIE Taxes,” China Accounting Blog, December 8, 2013,
http://www.chinaaccountingblog.com/weblog/accounting-for-vie-taxes.html.
10
Buyer Beware: Chinese Companies and the VIE Structure
administration would apply an additional 10% withholding tax. 23 Table 1 below shows
the potential tax liability of a hypothetical company with a VIE that has pre-tax earnings
of $500 million. 24
Pre-Tax Earnings $500,000,000
Although it is difficult to follow the actual cash flow of companies using VIEs, the
payments stipulated under the contractual arrangements between entities could incur the
taxation outlined above. Most ListCos indirectly confirm the potential for this panoply of
taxes in their SEC filings, citing the corporate tax as a reason not to extract earnings from
the VIE and the withholding tax as a reason not to pay dividends. While some companies
provide a precise estimate of their deferred tax liability25—even if hypothetical—many
more avoid providing such figures by claiming the calculation is impracticable, 26 citing a
reinvestment exemption, 27 or suggesting the existence of tax-free means of moving their
23 Ibid.; Paul Gillis, “Deferred Taxes and VIEs,” China Accounting Blog, December 12, 2013,
http://www.chinaaccountingblog.com/weblog/deferred-taxes-and-vies.html.
24 For other hypothetical formulations of tax liability, see Quintus Dienst, “Tax Issues and Legal Obstacles
Chinese Companies Face When Seeking to Capitalize Overseas Using a VIE Structure,” Friedrichshafen
Zeppelin Universitƒt, 2012, https://www.zu.de/info-wAssets/forschung/dokumente/zuwuerfe/2012-09-
20_CME_BA_Dienst.pdf.
25 “The deferred tax liabilities arising from the aggregate undistributed earnings of the PRC Domestic Entities
and… the WOFEs amounted to US$33,508 and US$29,297 as of December 31, 2015 and 2016,
respectively.” See Fang Holdings Ltd. Form 20-F, May 12, 2017,
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1294404/000114420417026955/v464444_20f.htm.
26 “Determination of the amount of unrecognized deferred tax liability related to these earnings is not
enterprise as of December 31, 2014, 2015 and 2016, as we plan to permanently reinvest these earnings in
the PRC.” See GDS Holdings, Ltd. Form 20-F, April 19, 2017,
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1526125/000110465917024311/a17-6886_120f.htm.
11
Buyer Beware: Chinese Companies and the VIE Structure
money. 28 The result of these divergent approaches—as some companies account for
deferred tax liabilities and others grasp for any reason to avoid them—is inconsistent
financial reporting across companies with VIEs, to the confusion of investors. 29
In reality, most VIEs appear not to pay their cash flow to the WFOE. Standard language
in ListCo SEC filings notes, “We may rely on dividends from our subsidiaries in China
for our cash requirements, including any payment of dividends to our shareholders. PRC
regulations may restrict the ability of our PRC subsidiaries to pay dividends to us [the
ListCo].” Since most of these companies reinvest their earnings in China, they add: “We
do not have any present plan to pay any cash dividends on our ordinary shares in the
foreseeable future after this offering. We currently intend to retain most, if not all, of our
available funds and any future earnings to operate and expand our business.” 30 CII
analysis has found that less than one fifth of U.S.-listed Chinese VIEs currently pay or
intend to pay dividends to shareholders. While not uncommon in start-ups, indefinite
reinvestment for at least some of these VIE-dependent companies appears more related to
Chinese restrictions on moving money from the VIE to the WFOE and ListCo. In short,
all the money made in China stays in China. This arrangement potentially leaves
investors to rely solely on the appreciation of the company’s stock price for a return on
their investment.
By creating a ListCo that bears the same recognizable name as a Chinese VIE and giving
every appearance that the publicly traded ListCo controls the VIE’s profits, these Chinese
companies may mislead unsophisticated foreign investors on the extent of their
participation in China’s emerging industries. MOFCOM designs its regulations to
preclude their participation, and the VIE structure—while sidestepping those
restrictions—nonetheless seems to ensure one-way capital flows into China. The unholy
trinity of potential risks—government enforcement, owner expropriation, and punitive
28 “A deferred tax liability should be recorded … However, recognition is not required in situations where the
tax law provides a means by which the reported amount of that investment can be recovered tax-free and
the enterprise expects that it will ultimately use that means.” See Yirendai Ltd. Form 20-F, April 24, 2017,
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1631761/000110465917025460/a16-23489_120f.htm. About this
point, Professor Gillis writes, “Arguing that the profits can be taken tax free from the VIE requires an
assumption that Chinese tax authorities are daft,” See Gillis, “Deferred Taxes.”
29 US GAAP requires the deferred taxes for each jurisdiction to be presented as a net noncurrent liability on
the balance sheet. See Brett Cohen and Kyle Quigley, “FASB Simplifies Balance Sheet Classification of
Deferred Taxes,” PwC, November 23, 2015, https://www.pwc.com/us/en/cfodirect/assets/pdf/in-brief/us-
2015-37-fasb-simplifies-balance-sheet-classification-deferred-taxes.pdf.
30 See ZTO Express (Cayman) Inc. Form 424B4, October 28, 2016,
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1677250/000104746916016357/a2230086z424b4.htm.
12
Buyer Beware: Chinese Companies and the VIE Structure
Year 2000 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Chinese
5 1 1 4 3 1 4 2 4 13 4 2 2 9 7 6 20
VIE IPOs
Dual Class 20% 0% 0% 0% 33% 0% 0% 0% 25% 15% 100% 50% 0% 78% 14% 83% 55%
Cayman/BVI
Incorporatio 60% 0% 100% 75% 100% 100% 100% 100% 50% 69% 100% 100% 50% 100% 100% 67% 90%
n
Table 2. Characteristics of Chinese VIE IPOs
Some Chinese companies using VIEs have conducted among the largest IPOs in the
United States by amount raised. Alibaba shattered records in 2014 and remains the largest
IPO ever conducted at $25 billion raised. 31 ZTO Express, raising $1.4 billion, was the
largest U.S. IPO in 2016. 32 Even as more U.S.-based companies IPO’d in 2017, Chinese
companies with VIEs conducted two of the top 10 largest IPOs this year, with Tencent-
backed Sogou raising $585 million and Alibaba-backed Best, Inc. raising $450 million.33
While the majority of VIE IPOs raise smaller sums, these headline-grabbing companies
contribute to the narrative that Chinese IPOs offer investors a secure, high-growth
investment opportunity.
31 Ryan Mac, “Alibaba Claims Title for Largest Global IPO Ever With Extra Share Sales,” Forbes, September
22, 2014, https://www.forbes.com/sites/ryanmac/2014/09/22/alibaba-claims-title-for-largest-global-ipo-ever-
with-extra-share-sales/#65819c448dcc.
32 Jethro Mullen, “This year’s biggest U.S. IPO is by a Chinese delivery firm,” CNN Money, October 27,
2016, http://money.cnn.com/2016/10/27/investing/zto-express-biggest-ipo-china-new-york/index.html.
33 Brian Deagon, “Sogou Rises in Debut After China Search Engine IPO Prices High,” Investor’s Business
13
Buyer Beware: Chinese Companies and the VIE Structure
Compounding the risk surrounding these companies using VIEs, however, is the poor
corporate governance practices they often employ. MOFCOM’s restrictions on foreign
investment and the resulting VIE arrangements seek to preserve Chinese control over
companies operating in strategic industries. Although VIEs finesse the letter of the law by
funneling foreign capital into restricted industries, many uphold the spirit of the law by
creating controlled companies. These companies employ a dual-class structure with one
class of shares containing anywhere from three to 30 times more voting power per share
than the other class. Chinese insiders then invest in the ListCo and hold the superior-
voting class of shares while outside investors purchase the inferior-voting class of shares.
Although the contracts are designed to transfer all ownership rights from the VIE’s
owners to the ListCo’s shareholders, these dual-class arrangements guarantee Chinese
insiders the vast majority of voting power over the entire structure despite their lack of
proportionate economic interest in the publicly listed company. Like Chinese IPOs
overall, the combined VIE and dual-class structure is increasingly prevalent on U.S.
exchanges.
Cayman Islands and BVI laws also exempt companies from maintaining a majority-
independent board of directors or fully-independent compensation and nominating and
corporate governance committees. CII analysis finds that 56% of U.S.-listed Chinese
companies with VIEs rely on these legal exemptions, leaving shareholders with severely
subpar protections. These companies go to great lengths to ensure that the board remains
composed of insiders. Alibaba’s structure includes a 28-member partnership of founder
Jack Ma’s associates that has the power to nominate a majority of the board. Sina
recently won a proxy fight against a U.S. hedge fund and subsequently invoked a “blank
check preferred stock” provision to issue its founder a class of shares with 10,000 votes
14
Buyer Beware: Chinese Companies and the VIE Structure
each and no economic rights. 34 The maneuver gave the founder control of the firm, with
no premium attached for other shareholders.
Investors could at least make informed decisions if they read SEC filings assuming that
companies fully disclosed these details. But disclosure varies significantly across VIEs,
as some detail the manifold risks of the contractual arrangements and inferior corporate
governance practices while others fail to clearly indicate in their prospectuses or annual
reports that they employ a VIE structure at all. As in the case of failing to account for
deferred tax liability, some companies creatively avoid disclosure through euphemism or
legal exemption. Borqs Technologies, for example, makes passing reference to its
“alternative structures to comply with regulations in certain Chinese industries,” and
Kingold Jewelry omits the entire risk factors section of its filings. 35 Neither company is a
foreign private issuer (FPI), an SEC designation that grants certain disclosure
exemptions, making their obfuscation all the more concerning. 36 Between 2012 and 2017,
the NYSE and Nasdaq delisted 12 Chinese companies with VIEs for failing to file annual
or quarterly reports with the SEC, according to CII analysis. This lack of transparency
helps obscure these companies’ poor corporate governance practices and the overarching
risks of the VIE structure.
Recommendations
Enshrined in CII policy is the principle that companies should take no action with the
intent of reducing accountability to shareholders. 37 The entire VIE structure, in function
and form, exists to serve a fundamentally contradictory purpose. Companies claim to
MOFCOM that the VIE remains under Chinese control while simultaneously signing
legally dubious contracts that promise shareholders the opposite. Despite the hundreds of
billions of dollars raised and record-breaking success of Chinese VIEs in U.S. capital
markets, they expose foreign investors to substantial risk. All the while, these
predominantly Cayman Islands-based companies pursue corporate governance practices
34 Amie Tsang, “Sina Doubles Down to Ward Off Activists After Proxy Fight,” The New York Times,
November 7, 2017, https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/07/business/dealbook/sina-proxy-activists.html.
35 See Borqs Technologies, Inc. Form 10-K, August 17, 2017,
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1650575/000121390017008855/f10k2017_pacificspecial.htm; “As
a smaller reporting company, we are not required to provide the information otherwise required by this Item,”
Kingold Jewelry, Inc. Form 10-K, April 17, 2017,
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1089531/000114420417020749/v464032_10k.htm#a_003.
36 Foreign private issuers are exempt from producing quarterly reports and proxy statements, for example.
http://www.cii.org/corp_gov_policies.
15
Buyer Beware: Chinese Companies and the VIE Structure
38 Tay Hwee Peng, “19th Party Congress: 7 key themes from President Xi Jinping’s work report,” The Straits
Times, October 18, 2017, http://www.straitstimes.com/asia/east-asia/19th-party-congress-7-key-themes-
from-president-xi-jinpings-work-report.
16
Buyer Beware: Chinese Companies and the VIE Structure
17
Buyer Beware: Chinese Companies and the VIE Structure
18
Buyer Beware: Chinese Companies and the VIE Structure
GSUM Gridsum Holding Inc. $261.60 Technology Cayman Islands 2016 NASDAQ
TYHT Shineco, Inc. $78.25 Consumer Non-Durables Delaware 2016 NASDAQ
SPI SPI Energy Co., Ltd. $81.21 Technology California 2016 NYSE
ZTO ZTO Express (Cayman) Inc. $12,147.56 Transportation Cayman Islands 2016 NASDAQ
BSTI Best, Inc. $3,874.50 Consumer Services Cayman Islands 2017 NYSE
BCAC Bison Capital Acquisition Corp. $78.59 Finance British Virgin Islands 2017 NASDAQ
Bright Scholar Education Holdings
BEDU Limited $2,530.00 Consumer Services Cayman Islands 2017 NYSE
China Internet Nationwide Financial
CIFS Services Inc. $1,118.26 Consumer Services British Virgin Islands 2017 NASDAQ
LYL Dragon Victory International Limited $71.87 Finance Cayman Islands 2017 NASDAQ
FEDU Four Seasons Education $476.40 Consumer Services Cayman Islands 2017 NYSE
HX Hexindai Inc. $601.42 Finance Cayman Islands 2017 NASDAQ
JT Jianpu Technology $1,566.80 Technology Cayman Islands 2017 NYSE
PPDF PPDAI Group $2,930.00 Finance Cayman Islands 2017 NYSE
QD Qudian Inc. $8,987.28 Finance Cayman Islands 2017 NYSE
REDU RISE Education Cayman Ltd $1,188.00 Consumer Services Cayman Islands 2017 NASDAQ
RYB RYB Education $401.70 Consumer Services Cayman Islands 2017 NYSE
SECO Secoo Holding Limited $228.60 Consumer Services Cayman Islands 2017 NASDAQ
SOGO Sogou $5,089.80 Technology Cayman Islands 2017 NYSE
YECO Yulong Eco-Materials Limited $8.39 Capital Goods Cayman Islands 2017 NASDAQ
ZKIN ZK International Group Co., Ltd $99.90 Capital Goods British Virgin Islands 2017 NASDAQ
FAMI Farmmi, Inc. (No Data) Consumer Non-Durables Cayman Islands Filed NASDAQ
LX LexinFintech Holdings, Ltd. (No Data) Technology Cayman Islands Filed NASDAQ
AIHS Senmiao Technology (No Data) Technology Nevada Filed NASDAQ
SSLJ SSLJ.COM Ltd. (No Data) Technology Cayman Islands Filed NASDAQ
Source: Nasdaq, CII analysis.
19