Equitisation
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Equitisation (Vietnamese: Cổ phần hóa) is a Vietnamese English term that denotes the conversion of a state-owned enterprise in Vietnam into a public (joint stock) company or a corporation by dividing ownership into shares. Equitisation is undertaken to further integrate the Vietnamese economy into the global market and gain access to foreign capital, and therefore often coincides with partial privatization, with the state retaining major or controlling stakes in the equitized firms.
This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (March 2021) |
See also
References
- PhD thesis: Equitisation and Stock-Market Development : The Case of Vietnam of Truong Dong Loc, July 2006, pdf 1.7mb.
- Overview of the Capital Markets in Vietnam and Directions for Development (World Bank Report May 2006) 1mb pdf, 82 pages
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