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BEIJING, March 19, (Xinhuanet) -- The public offering of Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC), the biggest of its kind on the Chinese mainland, made a weak debut in Hong Kong on March 18, but company executives and analysts believe it won't reduce its attractiveness for market players.
Shanghai-based SMIC's stocks on the Hong Kong Stock
Exchange fell 8 per cent from its initial public offering (IPO) price of HK$2.69
(34 US cents) on the first day of trading to HK$2.47 (32 US cents).
Its American depository shares (ADSs) on the New York
Stock Exchange also shed 11 per cent on Wednesday, from its IPO price to
US$15.50.
The turnover of its stocks closed at HK$2.42 billion
(US$310 million), the second most active in the market.
SMIC raised US$1.8 billion during flotation, the
third-largest IPO this year.
SMIC Chairman, President and CEO Richard Chang said
that stock prices are based on the market environment, the mentality of
international investors and company performance. He added that the only thing he
could control is company performance.
Louis Chan, an analyst with Hong Kong-based East Asia
Securities, said the fall of SMIC's stock prices was mainly due to market
sentiment.
"Some sellers were panicked by the overnight fall in
the United States," he said.
He believes the fall on the New York Stock Exchange
was related to a change of attitude on the part of US investors concerning China
concept stocks.
In the past two weeks, two Internet stocks from China
have also suffered from poor market performance on the NASDAQ.
"This (the fall of Linktone and Tom Online's shares)
has basically poisoned the Chinese IPO market," said David Menlow, president of
IPOfinancial.com, as quoted by Reuters. "I can't believe the markets will be
receptive to the next (Chinese) deal."
Chan did not agree that the market performance of
SMIC stocks was based on a previous statement by Jenny Wang, the company's chief
financial officer.
Wang said SMIC has sufficient capital for 2004 and
2005 and the lawsuit filed against the company by industrial giant Taiwan
Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp was groundless.
Some analysts have raised some doubts about the
statements, which are contradictory to the company's prospectus.
SMIC made an announcement on Tuesday, saying that
Wang's comments were "inaccurate."
Despite a poor market performance on the first day,
company executives and industrial analysts believe the prospects for China's
semiconductor industry look good in the long run.
Chang said yesterday that the semiconductor market in
the Chinese mainland is still on the rise.
"We are still holding it (SMIC stocks) and will in
the near future," Louis Chan said.
According to US-based market research firm Gartner
Inc, the semiconductor market in the Chinese mainland and Hong Kong will grow at
least 30 per cent this year, and forecasted that sales will reach US$34.8
billion.
The company predicted the country's consumption of
semiconductors will expand at an average annual rate of 18.6 per cent from 2002
to 2007 and amount to US$5.4 billion by then.
CCID Consulting, a domestic research firm, said last
month that the sales of chips on the Chinese mainland exceeded 200 billion yuan
(US$24.10 billion) for the first time in the industry's history with growth of
41 per cent last year.
Liu Junguo, a senior analyst with CCID Consulting,
believed the strong demand from consumer electronics will be a strong growth
engine, which will continue to attract foreign players.
"The rise of Chinese manufacturers like SMIC has also
promoted many multinationals to come to China to serve their customers," he
said. Enditem
(China Daily) |