Tsinghua Holdings
Native name | |||||||
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Company type | State-owned enterprise | ||||||
Founded | 2001 | ||||||
Headquarters | Beijing , China | ||||||
Area served | mainland China | ||||||
Key people |
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Revenue | CN¥70.539 billion (2015) | ||||||
CN¥4.594 billion (2015) | |||||||
CN¥1.514 billion (2015) | |||||||
Total assets | CN¥207.227 billion (2015) | ||||||
Total equity | CN¥17.729 billion (2015) | ||||||
Owner | Tsinghua University (100%) | ||||||
Parent |
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Subsidiaries | Tsinghua Unigroup | ||||||
Chinese name | |||||||
Simplified Chinese | |||||||
Traditional Chinese | |||||||
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Website | www | ||||||
Footnotes / references in a consolidated basis, excluding minority interest[1] |
Tsinghua Holdings Corp., Ltd. is a wholly owned subsidiary of Tsinghua University, itself a public university in China. The company was established as an in-house asset management company for Tsinghua's subsidiaries that were established in the 1990s by the technology transfer of research to business.
History
[edit]Tsinghua Holdings was formally formed in 2003 (though preliminarily tested in 2001)[2] in response to the 2001 policy of separating universities and university-owned enterprises;[3] all the shares of subsidiaries of Tsinghua University were transferred to Tsinghua Holdings. Announced by State Council of China in 2001, the plan aimed to separate ownership and management of holdings, bring on professional business managers, and separate assets of operating business and non-operating business. The university itself did not invest in other companies directly thereafter, but through the holding companies. The role of the university is to supervisor holding companies via nominating the board of directors with oversight for business plans, major investments, salary structure and other roles.[4]
The predecessor of Tsinghua Holdings, Beijing Tsinghua University Enterprise Group ( Chinese:
Company officials
[edit]Hu Haifeng, the son of then General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party Hu Jintao, was appointed in 2009 as the Party Committee Secretary of Tsinghua Holdings.[citation needed]
As of 2017, the Party Committee Secretary of Tsinghua Holdings was Long Dawei (Chinese: 龙大伟),[6] who also served as the vice-chairman. The current chairman was Xu Jinghong (Chinese:
Rong Yonglin (Chinese: 荣泳霖) was the former chairman of the holding.[8]
Subsidiaries
[edit]Chengzhi Shareholding
[edit]Chengzhi Co., Ltd was set up in Jiangxi province; its controlling shareholder is Tsinghua Holdings, and it was part of the corporate structure used in the acquisition of Shijiashuang Yongsheng Huatsing Liquid Crystal Co.[9]
Tsing Capital
[edit]Tsing Capital describes itself as a clean tech venture capital arm of Tsinghua Holdings.[10]
Tsinghua Tongfang
[edit]Tsinghua Tongfang Co., Ltd. is involved in consumer electronics and energy, software outsourcing, manufacture of PC hardware, and the manufacture of LEDs. A particular field was the Nuctech Container Inspection System.
Tsinghua Unigroup
[edit]Tsinghua Unigroup is a fabless semiconductor company that is 51 percent owned by Tsinghua Holdings and 49 percent owned by Beijing Jiankun Investment Group; the latter is led by Tsinghua Unigroup chairman and CEO Zhao Weiguo. In December 2013, it acquired Spreadtrum, now Unisoc,[11] then acquired RDA Microelectronics in 2014.[12] In 2016, Tsinghua Unigroup, Hubei Province and the China Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund invested in Yangtze Memory Technologies.[13] The $24 billion project employs about 6,000 people, with offices in Shanghai, Beijing and Silicon Valley.[14] In 2017, Tsinghua Unigroup formed Shanghai JV, a joint-venture with ChipMOS of Taiwan.[15] In 2019, it formed a subsidiary to produce DRAM memory chips.[16]
References
[edit]- ^ "2015 Annual Report" (PDF) (in Chinese). Tsinghua Holdings. 13 July 2016. Retrieved 7 February 2017.
- ^ "关于
同意 北京 大学 清 华大学 设立北大 资产经营有限 公司 和 清 华控股 有限 责任公司 的 复函" (in Chinese). General Office of the State Council of China. 24 April 2003. Retrieved 7 February 2017. - ^ Wong, Poh Kam (2011). Academic Entrepreneurship in Asia: The Role and Impact of Universities in National Innovation Systems. Edward Elgar. ISBN 978-1-84980-307-6.
- ^ "关于
北京 大学 清 华大学 规范校 办企业管理 体制 试点问题的 通知 " (in Chinese). General Office of the State Council of China. 1 November 2001. Retrieved 7 February 2017. - ^
清 华控股 有限 公司 2013年度 第 二期中期票据发行披露材料 - ^ "
清 华控股 党 委 " (in Chinese). Tsinghua Holdings. Archived from the original on February 8, 2017. Retrieved 7 February 2017. - ^ "
公司 治 理 " (in Chinese). Tsinghua Holdings. Retrieved 7 February 2017. - ^
大浪 淘 尽 唯 余 清 欢——访清华大学原 校 长助理 、清 华控股 有限 公司 原 董 事 长荣泳 霖 (in Chinese) - ^ Liu, Chengwei (2010). Chinese Capital Market Takeover and Restructuring Guide. Kluwer Law. ISBN 978-9041132109.
- ^ "About Tsinghua Holdings". Retrieved 2014-01-11.
- ^ "Spreadtrum Communications Agrees to $1.78 Billion Takeover". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 21 November 2020.
- ^ "Qualcomm's Problems Just Got Worse As China Builds Chip Giant". forbes.com. Retrieved 21 November 2020.
- ^ "A Chinese firm made a memory chip that can compete with Samsung. What's next". technode.com. 23 April 2020. Retrieved 21 November 2020.
- ^ "How China's chip industry defied the coronavirus lockdown". Nikkei Asia. Retrieved 21 November 2020.
- ^ "ChipMOS Milestone". chipmos.com. ChipMOS. Retrieved 21 November 2020.
- ^ "Amid U.S. tech squeeze, China's Tsinghua Unigroup forms new DRAM chip unit". Reuters. Retrieved 21 November 2020.