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China Eases IPO Rules For Companies Making Reusable Rockets

China Eases IPO Rules For Companies Making Reusable Rockets

Catenaa, Friday, December 26, 2025- China companies developing reusable commercial rockets will see easing of regulations to access Initial Public Offerings on the tech-heavy STAR market.

The Shanghai Stock Exchange said on Friday that new guidelines build upon previous regulations published in June that made it easier for pre-profit innovative companies to get listed on the STAR market.

Beijing is seeking ‌to address a gap in its space capabilities compared to the United States, which is currently dominant in the ability to return, ‌recover, and reuse a rocket’s first stage, or booster, after it is launched.

The fast lane exempts Chinese rocket firms from profitability and minimum revenue thresholds and instead requires them to ⁠have met key technological milestones, including ‌one successful orbital launch using reusable rocket technology.

Elon Musk’s aerospace giant SpaceX currently holds a near monopoly on this ‍technology, and its signature Falcon 9 is the only reusable rocket model that is regularly launched and used to put satellites into orbit.

Earlier this month, China’s leading private rocket firm, LandSpace, became the first domestic entity to carry out ​a full reusable rocket test with the launch of its new Zhuque-3 model, signalling its ambition to ‌catch up to SpaceX.

While the launch failed to complete the crucial step of recovering the rocket’s booster, a flurry of Chinese state-owned and private players are now rushing to test launch their own reusable rockets.

LandSpace has already said it wants to demonstrate a successful rocket recovery in mid-2026, when Zhuque-3 will be launched for a second time. 

But it has been said that the capital-intensive nature of rocket development means it ⁠will need access to China’s capital markets if it hopes ​to compete with SpaceX.

The Shanghai exchange’s rules do not state ​that rocket firms must successfully recover a rocket, only that reusable rocket technology be used to put a satellite into orbit, something LandSpace already achieved with this month’s launch.