China tobacco monopoly's global unit plans Hong Kong IPO by Staff Writers Hong Kong (AFP) Jan 2, 2019 The international wing of the world's largest cigarette maker -- a Chinese state-owned tobacco monopoly -- plans to list on the Hong Kong stock exchange, filing documents showed Wednesday. The unit seeking listing only accounts for a fraction of China National Tobacco Corporation, a hugely profitable state-run behemoth that has a monopoly on tobacco inside the world's most populous nation where smoking remains stubbornly popular. China National Tobacco buys leaf from overseas markets like Brazil and the United States and then sells it to domestic cigarette manufacturers at a six percent mark-up. It also has a monopoly on all tobacco exports from China, a fairly limited market largely catering to Chinese tourists in duty-free outlets across Asia. China National Tobacco does not publish data on its accounts but Bloomberg News said a rare release of financial data in 2012 suggested it earned profits on par with huge businesses like HSBC or Walmart. The international subsidiary planning to list -- China Tobacco International -- is a much smaller fish, recording revenue of HK$5.1 billion ($651 million) for the nine months ending in September, according to documents filed with the Hong Kong stock exchange. The listing comes at a time of growing global pressure, including inside China, to curb smoking. Tobacco claims nearly seven million lives yearly from cancer and other lung diseases, and accounts for about one-in-10 deaths worldwide, a million in China alone, according to the World Health Organization. Even as the percentage of adults who smoke has dropped in rich nations and plateaued in some emerging ones, the total number of smokers keeps climbing, driven by an expanding global population and more people in poor countries lighting up. Government moves to reduce smoking have done little to dent the profits of big tobacco companies. -- Bloomberg News contributed to this story --
Bricked in by poverty, Cambodia's farmers fight debt bondage Phnom Penh (AFP) Jan 2, 2019 Bopha should be in school but instead toils seven days a week in a searing brick kiln on the outskirts of Phnom Penh - a 14-year-old trapped in debt bondage in a boom industry preying on the poverty of Cambodia's farmers. Unpredictable weather linked to climate change is laying waste to Cambodian fields. Saddled with debt from failed harvests, tens of thousands of farmers are turning to brick factories, where owners pay off their bills in exchange for labour. The factories feed a surging co ... read more
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