 |
| Chinese stock markets closed higher on
Friday, a day that marked the seventh anniversary of the beginning of the
last bull market cycle from 1999 to 2001. (Xinhua
Photo) |
BEIJING, May 19 (Xinhua) -- Chinese stock
markets closed higher on Friday, a day that marked the seventh anniversary of
the beginning of the last bull market cycle from 1999 to 2001.
The gains came after three volatile trading days
triggered by falling prices of commodities on the international market and falls
of stock markets in neighboring countries.
The Composite Stock Index on the Shanghai Stock
Exchange, whichcomprises yuan-denominated A shares and foreign-currency B
shares,closed at 1,659.55 points, up 42 points, or 2.61 percent with turnover
totaled 41.6 billion yuan (5.2 billion US dollars). It opened Friday's trading
at 1,620.21 points.
The index hit 2,245 in 2001, a record high in the 16
years of stock markets in new China, followed by five year bear markets until
late 2005, although the country's economy has been growing at about 10 percent
annually since 1978.
The major index of Shenzhen Stock Exchange, the
Shenzhen Component Index, was up 73.33 points, or 1.71 percent to close at
4,369.40 points on Friday, with a total turnover of 23.7 billion yuan.
The share prices of bellwethers Sinopec and G
Baosteel rose by 4 percent, which helped stabilize the markets with improved
marketsentiment and pushed up the major indices.
Wan Bing, an analyst with Guangfa Securities Co.,
said the downward trend triggered by negative factors at home and abroad
iscoming to an end.
The Chinese stock markets rose to their highest
points in more than 18 months earlier this week with the Shanghai Composite
StockIndex at 1,678 points on Tuesday.
The index was 998 points on June 6, 2005 and it has
jumped by about 60 percent since then.
Analysts said the markets would be fluctuating in the
short runand are likely go up as the markets are now at the beginning of another
bull market cycle.
Prices of about 100 shares, out of the country's
1,370 domestically listed firms, have doubled in the past nine months, with
prices of several commodity shares up three to seven times.
China is expected to resume initial public offerings
(IPOs) in the near future as similar legal framework for IPOs was put in place
on Thursday.
China suspended IPOs a year ago for the ongoing State
share reform to overhaul the capital market.
Poor corporate governance and the country's flawed
legal framework for capital market, irregularities by listed firms and
controlling share holders and loose supervision have been blamed for the bear
market.
After over a year's efforts, China has improved its
Securities Law and Corporate Law and launched an unprecedented state share
reform to make the dominant non-tradable State shares, about two thirds of the
total, tradable to bring the system in line with international practices.
Qin Hong, an analyst with Jiangsu Tianding Securities
Co., saidthat the coming IPOs will bring quality firms with attractive values to
the Chinese markets step by step, adding new blood to expand the scale and
improve the value of the markets, which should be viewed as favorable factors in
the long run. Enditem