Shenzhen Stock Exchange
深交所
The Shenzhen Stock Exchange is one of China's major stock exchanges, positioned alongside the Shanghai Stock Exchange as a key venue for mainland Chinese companies seeking public listings. In recent years, it has actively partnered with venture capital firms to support technology innovation — for example, BlueRun Ventures has collaborated with the exchange to help frontier-industry portfolio companies access capital markets, with the firm stating it will continue working with the Shenzhen Stock Exchange and other partners to help Chinese science and technology enterprises grow into competitive industry leaders . The exchange operates in a broader ecosystem that includes the Beijing Stock Exchange, which was launched in November 2021 to serve as an earlier-stage platform for innovative small and medium enterprises, and the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, which has seen renewed activity in tech and healthcare IPOs as of late 2025 .
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Coverage
BlueRun Ventures Brings Frontier Industry Portfolio Companies to Shenzhen Stock Exchange
Sustained construction and advancement of the frontier technology-capital-industry flywheel effect
The Past and Future of ESG: From Dividing the Pie to Growing It | FreeS Research
A Complete Guide to ESG ESG — Environmental, Social, and Governance — has evolved from a niche investment framework into a mainstream lens for evaluating companies. Yet for many in China's tech and investment circles, it remains more buzzword than business practice. Here's what actually matters. **The Three Pillars** *Environmental* covers a company's carbon footprint, resource use, waste management, and broader ecological impact. For Chinese manufacturers, this increasingly means compliance with the EU's Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) and domestic dual-carbon targets — not just greenwashing. *Social* encompasses labor practices, supply chain ethics, data privacy, and community relations. In China's context, this gets complicated fast: tech platforms face scrutiny over algorithmic labor management (think Meituan's delivery riders), while consumer brands navigate Xinjiang cotton controversies that can tank overseas sales overnight. *Governance* examines board structure, executive compensation, shareholder rights, and anti-corruption measures. For Chinese companies listing in the U.S. or Hong Kong, this includes VIE structure transparency
The Beijing Stock Exchange Sets Sail: A Rational IPO Planning Guide for Startups | Ronghui Practical Insights
CITIC Securities Construction Li Xudong: Key Highlights of the Beijing Stock Exchange Regulatory Framework


