China on Wednesday introduced new measures intended to smooth the route for technology startups to go public, with a focus on firms developing quantum technology, nuclear fusion, and brain-computer interface systems.
The Shanghai Stock Exchange issued updated guidance aimed specifically at making it easier for large-model artificial intelligence companies to list on the STAR Market. In its announcement, the exchange framed support for listings in emerging and future industries as a core objective under the country’s next five-year economic development plan.
At a forum in Shanghai, Wu Qing, chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission, characterized global capital markets as accelerating reforms to better meet the needs of innovation and secure leadership positions. "A new wave of technological revolution, led by AI, is being integrated into production and daily life at an unprecedented pace," Wu said.
The newly published rules took effect immediately. They set out how companies building large AI models can use the STAR Market’s fifth listing standard, a route created for firms that possess strategic technologies but have not yet achieved profitability. That standard is intended to let technology-focused companies access public capital despite a lack of current earnings.
In addition to large-model AI firms, the Shanghai bourse signaled support for listings by companies operating in hydrogen energy, biomedical engineering and robotics. The exchange noted that early-stage large-model companies require capital market backing to sustain long-term research and development efforts.
These announcements follow a statement from China’s top securities regulator outlining plans to embrace a new phase of technological revolution and industrial upgrades. Regulators framed the measures as part of an effort by Beijing to increase the flow of capital into the technology sector, an area described in the announcements as central to competition between China and the United States.
The timing of the measures coincides with preparations by several U.S.-linked technology companies for major initial public offerings on Wall Street, with the announcements noting that firms such as SpaceX, OpenAI and Anthropic are preparing sizable listings abroad.
Context and implications
By clarifying how unprofitable but strategically important technology companies can use the STAR Market’s specialized listing standard, Chinese exchanges aim to provide a financing channel for firms that require extended development horizons. The move highlights regulators’ intent to prioritize capital allocation toward sectors they deem critical for the next phase of industrial and technological advancement.