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HK Surge Stimulates Mainland Shares

China's shares recouped early losses to finish higher yesterday, as investors bought into firms that have listings both on the mainland and in Hong Kong on prospects of strong results.

Brokers said A shares, open to domestic and select foreign investors, played catch-up after their Hong Kong counterparts, known as H shares, had surged over the past few months.

The benchmark Shanghai composite index, grouping hard-currency B shares for foreigners and yuan-denominated A shares, reversed early losses to finish 0.35 percent higher at 1,364.301 points.

Shenzhen's shares climbed up 12.05 to 3,128.18.

Shanghai's hard currency B shares inched up 0.41 to close at 103.74. Shenzhen's B-share market edged up 0.66 to 254.21.

China's largest polyester maker, Sinopec Yizheng Chemical Fibre Co Ltd, which also has H shares listed in Hong Kong, was one of the top gainers with its A shares jumping 4.41 percent to 4.97 yuan (US$0.6).

The company has said profits in the first nine months of this year will rise by over 50 percent from a year earlier.

Another H share firm, Ma'anshan Iron and Steel Co, saw its A shares close up 1.02 percent at 3.97 yuan (US$0.48) after its net profits for the nine months ending at September leapt to 1.69 billion yuan (US$204 million) from 250.54 million yuan (US$30.2 million) over the same period a year ago.

Ma'anshan also forecast its earnings for all of 2003 would grow by more than 50 percent from 2002.

Despite yesterday's bounce, analysts said sentiment on the mainland markets was still weak after a slump due to a number of negative factors from a rash of stock offers to a tightening of bank loans.

The Shanghai index has slid 16.4 percent since mid-April, versus a 42.8 percent rally in neighbouring Hong Kong.

Analysts said they expected the index to fall and test the year's low of 1,311.684 points set on January 6.

"During the recent market falls, buying in any stocks has been short-lived," said analyst Zhong Jingteng at Ping'an Securities.

"As there are no sustained hot stocks, the market lacks momentum to make any decent gains," he said.

"As a result, we would not be surprised even if the index fell below the psychologically important 1,300-point level."

There was renewed selling in banking stocks yesterday, after China's Central Bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan reiterated regulators would maintain their grip on bank lending.

Huaxia Bank Co Ltd, one of the most active counters, closed down 1.7 percent at 6.98 yuan (US$0.84) as investors fretted over how loan tightening might affect the banking sector.

China Merchants Bank, the biggest of the country's five listed banks by capitalization, dropped 2.06 percent to 9.05 yuan (US$1.09), while Pudong Development Bank declined 2.07 percent to 9.00 yuan (US$1.08).

On the forex market, China's yuan ended two notches firmer versus the US dollar at 8.2765 yesterday, while intraday trading saw the currency brush up briefly against 8.2760 - the stronger end of its managed trading range.

The one-year non-deliverable dollar forward discount versus the yuan was at 2,950 points by 0900 GMT yesterday, implying a rate of 7.983 yuan per dollar within 12 months.

NDFs are a transaction where a forward price is agreed between a customer and a bank, but settlement on the value date is undertaken entirely in US dollars.

The market's turnovers climbed to a heavy US$1.13 billion from US$960 million on Monday. The yuan firmed to 7.5393 against 100 Japanese yen from 7.5759 and strengthened versus the euro to 9.6296 from Monday's 9.6418.

(China Daily October 22, 2003)

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