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BEIJING, May 25 (Xinhua) -- China CAMC Engineering
Co. has become the first Chinese firm to launch an initial public offering(IPO)
since the introduction of a new share issuance system on May 18.
The firm, sponsored by state-owned enterprises
specializing in international agricultural engineering projects and machinery,
plans to issue 60 million A-shares on Shenzhen Stock Exchange, according to a
company statement.
The statement said the firm would publish the share
price set by institutional investors on June 2, and shares would be available on
the market from June 5.
China Securities News described the IPO as the
beginning of a new era of the capital market in China, while the Shanghai
Securities Journal welcomed the move as a major event in the history of China's
capital market.
Under the newly revised Securities Law and Corporate
Law, all public shares to be issued domestically will be tradable after a period
set by the China Securities Regulatory Commission.
In the past, only about a third of shares of
domestically listed companies were floated on the market, and the rest remained
under state ownership to ensure the government control of the state-run sector.
Experts said the non-tradable shares, together with
poor corporate governance, were to blame for the lackluster performance of
China's stock markets during the 2001-2005 period, despite the country's booming
economy.
The markets closed flat on Thursday partly because
oil giant Sinopec was down by about 2 percent despite the fact that China raised
processed oil prices by about 10 percent on Wednesday.
Analysts said many investors cashed in shares in the
belief the markets may fall in coming weeks after share prices rose by about 30
percent.
The resumption of IPOs is also blamed for the
downward pressure on the markets as new shares would siphon off capital from
shares already traded on the markets with investors sell to buy new stock.
The Shanghai A-share Index was up 0.67 points at
1,671.61 on turnover of 22.86 billion yuan (2.86 billion dollars).
Professor Li Yongsen, of the People's University,
said the resumption of IPOs would have a negative impact on the stock market in
the short term, but would turn favorable in the long run.
Stable and healthy stock markets needed new blood to
improve their scale and structure, he added. Enditem |