Home / Business / Finance Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read
Shares continue upward trend
Adjust font size:

Chinese share prices rose for the fourth consecutive day on Monday, with the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index gaining 31.77 points to close at 5,393.34, even though other markets in Asia fell.

 

The Shenzhen Component Index on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange closed at 18,376.96 points on Monday, up 254.55 points, or 1.40 percent.

 

The combined turnover of the two bourses rose to 249.23 billion yuan (34.2 billion U.S. dollars), up from 224.48 billion yuan on Friday.

 

Gains outnumbered losses by 642 to 183 in Shanghai, and by 445 to 209 in Shenzhen.

 

The Sanyuan Information, a consultancy company in Hangzhou, attributed the growth to the continuing appreciation of the yuan.

 

The yuan hit a new high on Monday to reach a central parity rate of 7.2695 yuan to the dollar, up 84 basis points from Friday. The exchange rate broke the 7.30 mark last Wednesday.

 

The appreciation helped drive up real estate shares, said Sanyuan Information. China Vanke, the largest listed real estate developer in China, gained 0.94 yuan, or 3.21 percent, to close at 30.18 yuan per share, and Gemdale, another major developer, rose 5.43 percent to 46.56 yuan.

 

The nonferrous metal and chemical shares will also be boosted by the rising yuan in the near future, the company said.

 

Coal shares soared, as sky-high oil prices force investors to look at alternative energy resources. The Shenhuo Group, which owns a major thermal power plant, went up 9.29 percent, and Datong coal rose 5.24 percent.

 

Banking heavy weights ICBC and Bank of China remained stable, but most commercial banks, such as Shanghai Pudong Development Bank and China Minsheng Banking Corp, gained ground.

 

Despite the strong performance of A shares on the mainland stock market, markets in other parts of Asia were weak. Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index fell 340 points, or 1.28 percent, to 27,179 points and the market in Taiwan slumped 4.1 percent.

 

The H-shares index, which is composed of 43 companies registered on the Chinese mainland, also dropped 313 points to close at 15,591 points.

 

Analysts said the drop came as a result of the latest prediction by a Harvard University economist who warned there was a higher probability of an economic recession in the United States.

 

Martin Feldstein said the chance of a recession had increased to more than 50 percent in the U.S. following a report that showed the country's unemployment rate had jumped to five percent, the highest in two years, last December.

 

(Xinhua News Agency January 8, 2008)

Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read

Comment
Username Password Anonymous
China Archives
Related >>
- Chinese shares rebound
- Broad-based rally lifts stocks at midday
- Shares ease on last trading day of 2007
- Key Shanghai share index seen to rise
Most Viewed >>
- Gold futures jumps to daily limit upon debut
- Chinese economy in 2007
- Survey: B2B transaction volume up 25.5% in 2007
- Policy bank eyes rail project stake
- China Eastern not to ally with Air China

Nov. 1-2 Tianjin World Shipping (China) Summit
Nov. 7-9 Guangzhou Recycling Metals International Forum
Nov. 27-28 Beijing China-EU Summit
Dec. 12-13 Beijing China-US Strategic Economic Dialogue

- Output of Major Industrial Products
- Investment by Various Sectors
- Foreign Direct Investment by Country or Region
- National Price Index
- Value of Major Commodity Import
- Money Supply
- Exchange Rate and Foreign Exchange Reserve
- What does the China-Pakistan Free Trade Agreement cover?
- How to Set up a Foreign Capital Enterprise in China?
- How Does the VAT Works in China?
- How Much RMB or Foreign Currency Can Be Physically Carried Out of or Into China?
- What Is the Electrical Fitting in China?