Stocks dive from 7-year high on IPO concern
Updated: 2015-06-16 16:18
By Dai Tian(chinadaily.com.cn)
|
|||||||||||
Investors at a securities brokerage in Qingdao city, Shandong province, June 16, 2015. [Photo/IC] |
Chinese stocks dived from seven-year high on Tuesday, with the benchmark Shanghai index tumbling 3.5 percent, amid concern that a flood of new offerings might "steal the momentum" from existing equities.
The Shanghai Composite Index pared for a second day from its highest level since 2008 and closed at 4,887.43, down 175.56 point, while the Shenzhen Component Index slid 3.5 percent to 17,075.93.
Aerospace manufacturing, engineering machinery companies led the loss on Tuesday. CRRC Corp, the train maker behemoth formed after the merger of China North Railway and China South Railway, dropped by a daily limit of 10 percent, along with China Railway Construction Corporation.
Internet-themed stocks edged down after a year-long surge. The ChiNext index, which tracks China's Nasdaq-style board of growth enterprises listed at Shenzhen exchange, declined nearly 2.9 percent on Tuesday, paring its six-month gain to 118 percent.
Subscriptions for 25 initial public offerings (IPOs) starting Wednesday that may tie up at least 6 trillion yuan ($970 billion) of fund have sparked liquidity concern, said analysts.
Among all, Guotai Junan Securities, China's third-largest brokerage by asset scale, will kick off road shows on Wednesday following the announcement of its issue price, selling no more than 1.53 billion shares, said the company in a filing to Shanghai Stock Exchange.
About 20 IPOs will be open for subscription starting Thursday and Friday, marking a peak of dense offerings since the year-long hiatus, reported China Securities Journal.
It's evitable that a growing amount of capital will flow into the market along with the wealth redistribution, and the momentum cannot be altered easily, said Xun Yugen, chief strategist at Haitong Securities, in a note on Monday.
However, Hong Hao, chief strategist at BOCOM International Holdings, warned that the coming six months will be a critical time window to monitor for potential crash.
"As extreme returns with small possibility pile up, gains must accelerate to compensate excessive risk undertaking. But the probability to sustain such excess diminishes, too, much like being dealt straight flush every hand," he wrote in a note released on Tuesday.
The Shanghai gauge has surged nearly 60 percent since the beginning of this year and 145 percent for the past 12 months.
The CSI 300 gauge closed at 5,064.82 points, down 3 percent on Tuesday.
Related Stories
Who's next? Investors guess which firms will exit US bourses 2015-06-16 08:02
Chinese shares close lower on June 15 2015-06-15 15:53
Bourses subdued as MSCI decision nears 2015-06-10 07:52
China sees 166 firms getting listed this year 2015-06-06 14:20
Revisions will end CSRC approval of IPOs 2015-04-21 07:10
Today's Top News
Why thousands of Chinese are migrating to Europe every year
European bank seeks to combine strength with AIIB
Alibaba sees business potential in Russia
Visa process for Chinese traveling through Europe streamlined
Grexit risk hikes
The most costly cities for expats
China, Russia sign railway deal
No mistreatment of GSK sleuth: Govt
Hot Topics
Lunar probe , China growth forecasts, Emission rules get tougher, China seen through 'colored lens', International board,
Editor's Picks
What do we know about AIIB |
Full coverage of Boao Forum for Asia |
Annual legislative and political advisory sessions |
Festival Special: Apps that make holiday shopping easier |
Listed firms caught in anti-corruption net |
Conca set to return to China |