U.S.-traded Chinese search giant Baidu Inc. is one of the latest companies, mostly China-based, to face possible delisting from American exchanges unless they abide by auditing standards. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) added Chinese search engine Baidu on March 30 to its growing provisional list under Holding Foreign Companies Accountable Act (HFCAA), alongside other four firms. The other firms are Tencent-backed online brokerage Futu Holdings Ltd., Chinese video-streaming platform iQiyi Inc., U.S. biopharmaceutical company CASI Pharmaceuticals Inc., and Chinese aquaculture firm Nocera Inc. The commission-identified issuers have until April 20 to submit evidence refuting the SEC’s designation, or it’ll be conclusively required to provide the information, according to HFCAA. The law signed in late 2020 by then-President Donald Trump grants SEC the power to delist foreign companies from the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq exchange if they fail to allow U.S. watchdogs to inspect their financial audits for three straight …