Chinese stocks rocket 5.33% amid Asian rally

By Li Zengxin (chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2007-08-20 16:29

The Federal Reserve of the United States announced reduction of the discount rate by 0.5 percent last Friday, triggering a surge of the US stock market. The effect spilled over to the Asian countries, causing today's strong growth.

There is yet more encouraging news for the A-share market. The sub-prime loan crisis has in fact had a limited impact on the Chinese economy, Zheng Jingping, spokesman of the National Bureau of Statistics, said yesterday. This is the first time a governmental official has responded to the crisis' impact on the Chinese economy.

On the other hand, vice president of the China Securities Regulatory Commission Tu Guangshao said on the sidelines of a financial forum over the weekend that wealth management development in China requires a larger-scaled capital market.

He said the connections between wealth management and the capital market have grown more apparent and a more advanced capital market with efficient risk control mechanisms is needed. Analysts believe his comments imply that the country is aiming to encourage the development of and maintain stability in the stock market as its priority task.

The stock exchanges also stepped up efforts to better regulate the market. The Shanghai Stock Exchange (SSE) yesterday announced new rules for stock trading to prevent and curb irregularities.

The new rules, targeted mainly at "abnormal price fluctuations", are expected to curb insider trading, excessive speculation and price rigging, an SSE statement said. They will become effective from September 1.

The SSE will target stocks with limitless price fluctuation and will have the right to suspend them from trading for up to 30 minutes on a day they surge above 100 percent or drop below 50 percent of their opening prices. The rule will be used to prevent excessive speculation on newly issued and debuting stocks, SSE said.

The second new rule targets at curbing insider trading. The SSE will have the right to suspend the trading of stocks that surge or drop dramatically for two consecutive days and if more than 30 percent of their total daily turnover comes from one branch office of a securities company. The stocks can only resume trading at 10:30 a.m. on the day a company makes a formal clarification.

The third rule will be used to curb investors' excessive speculation on penny worth stocks, the SSE said. Special treatment stocks, which are allowed a 5 percent daily fluctuation, can be suspended from trading if they reach the daily limit at close for three consecutive days.


(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

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