BEIJING, May 25 (Xinhua) -- China's education watchdog expressed concern
Friday at the increasing number of college students investing in stocks hoping
to cash in the country's booming stock market.
Wang Xuming, spokesman with the Ministry of Education, said at a press
conference that the ministry does not encourage college undergraduates to enter
the stock market.
The students can hardly assume the risk as they have no fixed income and
most of their capital comes from their parents, Wang added.
The education ministry has noticed college students' enthusiasm for the
stock market in recent months, according to Wang.
Media reports said organizations relating to the stock market have been set
up in some universities.
After four years in the doldrums, China's stock markets began to rebound at
the beginning of 2006, with the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index nearly
doubling in a year.
The number of new trading accounts opened by individuals in the Chinese
mainland's two bourses reached five million in the first quarter of this year,
compared with 3.08 million for the whole of last year.
China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) has warned people about the
risks of stock market investment in a notice issued earlier this month and has
urged stock exchanges, securities dealers and related authorities to educate
investors on the risks.
Chinese shares rebounded from Thursday's downturn, hitting a new high on
Friday, with the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index, which tracks both
yuan-denominated A shares and hard-currency B shares closing at 4,179.78 points,
up 28.65 points from the previous close.