BEIJING, Sept. 29 -- The benchmark Shanghai Composite
Index surged 2.64 percent on Friday, boosted by the return of money from a huge
IPO and by a spectacular listing by drilling and oil equipment firm China
Oilfield Services.
The Index ended the day at 5,552.301 points, after
hitting a fresh all-time high of 5,560.417. Friday's close left it up 106
percent since the start of this year.
Gaining Shanghai stocks far outnumbered losers by 783
to 60. Turnover in Shanghai A shares was 137.6 billion yuan (18.3 billion U.S.
dollars), which was moderate but still sharply higher than Thursday's two-month
low of 95.1 billion.
China Oilfield Services almost tripled from its
initial public offer price to close at 39.90 yuan, far exceeding analysts'
expectations of a jump of 50 percent. That left it at a premium of over 130
percent to its Hong Kong-listed H shares, one of the biggest premiums for a
dual-listed share.
The stock will only be included in the index in
mid-October, but its strength improved sentiment throughout the market.
Analysts said its dramatic debut was partly due to
its near-monopoly position in China's booming drilling sector, but its listing
was also perfectly timed to attract money flooding back into the market after
the IPO of Shenhua Energy.
Shenhua, China's top coal producer, drew a record
2.66 trillion yuan in subscriptions early this week and when the money from
unsuccessful retail applications was unfrozen on Friday, some of it immediately
returned to the stock market.
"The market was so strong today (Friday) and
there was so much money - I expect the index will just continue rising," said Wu
Feng, analyst at Tianxiang Investment Consulting.
Some traders are talking of 6,000 or 6,500 points being hit by the end of this year.
Others, however, said Friday's moderate turnover showed many investors remained cautious about holding stocks over the holiday week starting next Monday.
And there is considerable concern among some investors about soaring valuations for stocks.
In its latest tightening measure, the government on Friday announced a series of steps to cool the property market, including a ban on banks lending to developers found to have been hoarding land, and a rise in the down payment requirement for purchases of second homes.
Analysts said the steps could have a modest impact in slowing the rise of property prices.
But property shares, which had already fallen early this week as details of the steps were leaked, rose on Friday. The biggest listed developer, China Vanke, rose 3.25 percent to 30.20 yuan after sliding 7.23 percent over the previous two days.
The coal sector was strong, with Pingdingshan Tianan Coal Mining up its 10 percent daily limit to 48.91 yuan, partly because Shenhua's IPO stimulated interest in the sector.
Shipping shares surged after the Baltic Dry Index jumped more than 1 percent to another record high on Thursday. China COSCO Holdings soared 10 percent to 45.06 yuan.
Insurance stocks led the financial sector up, with China Life climbing 6.88 percent to 62.41 yuan.
(Source: China Daily/Agencies)
Records-breaking IPOs in September
BEIJING, Sept. 29 -- Initial public offerings (IPO)
in China's stock markets recorded a total capital of almost 150 billion yuan
(20.0 billion U.S. dollars) in September alone, according to Friday's China
Securities News.
A total of 15 new shares were added to the list this
month, raising approximately 150 billion yuan in A-share blue chips such as
China Construction Bank (CCB) and China Shenhua Energy.
Before September, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China
held the record, having raised 46.64 billion yuan (6.21 billion dollars) from
its IPO. Full story