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A couple look at the screen at the
Shanghai Stock Exchange on Wednesday, Jan. 3, 2008. China's stock markets
will have another good year in 2008, but corporate profit growth is likely
to decelerate amid tightening measures, analysts said. (Xinhua
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
SHANGHAI, Jan. 3 (Xinhua) -- China's stock markets
will have another good year in 2008, but corporate profit growth is likely to
decelerate amid tightening measures, analysts said.
According to a report from Hua An Fund Management Co,
Ltd., the trend of Chinese investors shifting their wealth into equities hasn't
fundamentally changed. However, the report said, the profit growth of listed
companies would slow to an estimated 35 percent in 2008 from around 55 percent
last year, as the impact of monetary tightening and similar measures began to be
felt.
In 2007, the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index hit a
record high of 6,124 points on Oct. 16, compared with 2,675 points at the end of
2006. Shares edged up on the first trading day of 2008 on Wednesday, with stocks
related to the Olympics as well as Beijing-based and consumption-related stocks
recording gains of up to the 10 percent daily limit.
On Wednesday, the Shanghai Composite Index, which
covers both A and B shares, was up 11.25 points or 0.21 percent, to close at
5,272.8 points. The Shenzhen Component Index on the smaller market climbed
155.53 points, or 0.88 percent, to stand at 17,856 points.
China's rapid economic growth in 2007 was accompanied
by increasing inflation pressure. Soaring food prices drove the consumer price
index (CPI) to an 11-year high of 6.9 percent in November.
The government has pledged to adopt tighter monetary
policies and prudent fiscal policies to ensure structural adjustment and uniform
economic development this year.
Hou Ning, an economic analyst, said the tight
monetary policy would affect the stock market, but the impact would take time to
materialize.
"The stock market has become a new platform for more
and more Chinese citizens to share a chunk of the increasing wealth of the
country," Hou said.
Last year, 447 billion yuan (61.2 billion U.S.
dollars) was raised through initial public offerings (IPOs) on Shanghai's
A-share market., which was 2.7 times the amount of 2006.
"The surge in IPO activity in China is a clear
reflection of the growth in the Chinese economy and the confidence investors
have about putting their money into China," said Gil Forer, global director of
IPO Initiatives at Ernst & Young, a global professional services firm.
Forer said the IPO pipeline for 2008 looked healthy,
especially across the emerging markets, despite ongoing market uncertainty. In
China alone, some 330 billion yuan would be raised through A-share listings in
Shanghai, according to a report by Ernst & Young.