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| A young investor (right) in Shanghai reacts
to a sharp rise in the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index yesterday.
Shares jumped more than 8 per cent yesterday in both Shanghai and
Shenzhen, the biggest single-day rise in three years. [newsphoto]
| BEIJING, June 8 (Xinhuanet) -- The composite
indices of both Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges jumped up by more than 8
percent Wednesday, spurred by the denial of a central bank plan for interest
rate increase.
All shares listed on the two bourses went up
Wednesday and about 100 shares rose by a daily maximum of 10 percent. Nearly 300
climbed 9 percent.
The governor of the central bank Zhou Xiaochuan said
Tuesday that the bank is not going to increase interest rates, and no timetable
exists for an interest rate hike.
The Composite Stock Index on the Shanghai Stock
Exchange, which comprises yuan-denominated A shares and foreign-currency B
shares,closed at 1,115.58 points, up 8.21 percent, with total a turnover of 19.9
billion yuan (2.42 billion US dollars).
The Shenzhen stock exchange closed at 2,936.57
points, up 8.38 percent, the biggest daily jump since June 24, 2001. The total
turnover stood at 11.5 billion yuan (1.4 billion US dollars).
Analysts also attributed the soar to a strong rebound
after the continuous fall of share prices in the past seven weeks.
Gu Jie, an analyst with Hualin Securities Co., said
that another contributing factor is the news that the securities regulator plans
to allow listed firms to buy back their shares. The plan demonstrates the
regulator's determination to stabilize the stock markets in China, which hit new
eight-year low Monday.
Wednesday's total turnover in both Shanghai and
Shenzhen stock exchanges was about three times that of the daily turnover for
the last few months.
Analysts said there are still room for the indices to
rise in coming sessions, and investors should also watch carefully whethersome
more encouraging news will be confirmed as reported. Various publication have
reported news that the central bank, the People'sBank of China, will inject
financial resources into selected securities firms, and blue chip firm Yangtze
Hydroelectric has been selected for the latest experiment in selling state-owned
shares.
China Securities Regulatory Commission, said it began
Monday to collect public opinions for the draft of a regulation allowing listed
companies to buy back the public shares. Enditem |