BEIJING, July 16 -- The initial public offerings (IPOs) of four companies,
which all ended subscriptions on July 12, drained a total of as much as 2.01
trillion yuan (US$264.2 billion) of capital out of the Chinese stock markets,
100 billion yuan over the market value of tradable shares in the Shenzhen
bourse.
Bank of Nanjing opened at 11 yuan per share, straining
liquidity of 1.03 trillion yuan. Online subscriptions totaled 78.6 billion
shares with 864.3 billion yuan frozen, while offline subscriptions contributed
to 15.8 billion shares with 173.8 billion yuan frozen.
Bank of Ningbo
opened at 9.2 yuan per share, with a total frozen capital of 818.4 billion yuan.
There were 1,098,865 valid online subscribers, buying 61.8 billion shares with
568.6 billion yuan frozen, and 338 offline subscribers, buying 27.2 billion
shares with a frozen capital of 249.8 billion yuan.
Guangdong Ronsen
Super Micro-sire Co Ltd, a high-tech firm, announced the opening price at 8.15
yuan per share, which froze a total of 88.2 billion yuan in capital. Valid
online subscribers reached 783,321, purchasing one billion shares, while offline
subscribers were 141, buying 559 million shares.
Sichuan Gaojin Food
opened at 10.15 yuan per share, draining 68.2 billion yuan of capital. Among the
subscribers, 442,858 were online, buying 5.9 billion shares, while 159 were
offline, purchasing 772 million shares.
(Source: China Daily)