First of all, Huawei itself does not meet the listing conditions. Huawei is a wholly-owned company, that is, its middle managers and even some employees hold shares in a company. Huawei holds less than 65,438+00% of the shares. This ownership structure does not allow him to go public because he has a certain number of requirements for shareholders of listed companies. The first thing they want to go public is the composition of shareholders, and they want to get back their employees' shares. Moreover, listing also has certain risks.
Secondly, Huawei itself does not need to go public, because many companies want to make money by going public. Generally speaking, it just wants to make money, because it can sell stocks after listing, and if someone invests, it will have money, and if it has money, it will continue to develop its own new industry. Although it is necessary to disclose the corresponding company information, most companies can accept Huawei's failure, and Huawei itself is not short of money, because what he does is an entity, and his mobile phone profit rate is quite good, and it is listed.
Many other companies did not choose to go public, and some did not because there was a fixed process for listing. If you don't go public by backdoor, you have to go public if you don't use this way of borrowing chickens and laying eggs. You may go public for several years, and then some companies go public abroad because their own conditions can't meet the needs of domestic listing, such as Alibaba, who chose to go public on Nasdaq because it is a domestic listed Internet company.