Shanghai Stock Exchange Clarifies Listing Rules for Unprofitable AI Firms
Quick Look
- The Shanghai Stock Exchange has updated listing rules for unprofitable AI firms, allowing them to go public on the Star Market if they have an anticipated market cap of at least 4 billion yuan and clear commercialization plans.
- This aims to support high-quality AI companies amid intense global competition.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
The Shanghai Stock Exchange has updated its listing rules to accommodate unprofitable AI firms, particularly those developing large language models, amidst a global race with US labs.
The Shanghai Stock Exchange (SSE) has clarified rules for unprofitable artificial intelligence model developers wanting to go public, as China’s large language model (LLM) firms scramble for fresh capital in an intense race with US labs.
LLM developers can go public on the Shanghai bourse’s Star Market under a set of listing standards that require them to have an anticipated market cap of at least 4 billion yuan (US$591 million), as well as meeting certain criteria in terms of market potential, according to an exchange statement on Wednesday.
The move aimed to support listings of “high-quality” AI firms that had yet to form “a certain scale of revenue”, according to the statement.
AI players allowed to go public under such rules should have launched and operated at scale at least one LLM product, and need to have established “clear commercialisation arrangements”, according to the statement.
LLMs have “emerged as the focal point of global technological competition”, the SSE said in a separate WeChat post on the same day. Companies should have sustained, high-intensity research and development efforts, computing power investments and specialised talent, and be “in urgent need of support from capital markets”, the WeChat post said.
Also on Wednesday, the SSE amended rules for the Star Market to support listings from companies in other fields, including quantum technology, biomedicine, hydrogen and nuclear fusion energy, brain-computer interfaces, robotics, and sixth-generation mobile communications (6G), to “support high-level self-reliance and self-strengthening in science and technology”.
Open Questions
- Will these rule changes attract sufficient high-quality AI firms?
- What will be the long-term impact on China's AI industry?




