Stocks fall as Ping An makes debut

By Dong Zhixin (chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2007-03-01 15:18


Dr. Peter Ma, chairman and chief executive officer of Ping An Insurance (Group) Co., gestures as he speaks at the insurer's IPO ceremony in the Shanghai Stock Exchange Thursday March 1, 2007. [newsphoto]

Chinese stocks plummeted Thursday in spite of the premier's pledges to develop the capital market as Ping An Insurance (Group) Co. made China's second biggest domestic IPO.

The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index fell 83.88 points, or 2.91 per cent to 2,797.19. The Shenzhen Composite Index lost 16.91 points, or 2.30 per cent, to 719.90. The Shanghai and Shenzhen 300 index was down 71.21 points, or 2.80 per cent, to 2,473.36.

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The fall came as Premier Wen Jiabao vowed to vigorously push forward the development of the capital and insurance markets in an article published Thursday by the Party journal Qiushi (Seeking Truth).

Ping An Insurance, China's No. 2 life insurer, opened at 50 yuan, a rise of 47.93% over the offer price of 33.80 and closed at 46.79, making it the most expensive financial share in the country's A-share market.

The insurer, 19.9 percent-owned by HSBC, raised 38.87 billion yuan in the world's biggest ever insurance IPO and China's second biggest A-share offering. The country's domestic IPO record was set by the Industrial & Commercial Bank of China last October, which raised $6 billion.

However, the Ping An listing did not help other financial shares recover the lost ground. China Life shed 5.21 per cent to 34 yuan. The Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, the nation's biggest lender, sank 3.06 per cent to 4.75 yuan while the Citic Securities Co., the nation's biggest publicly traded brokerage, slipped 5.63 per cent to 35.02 yuan.

Chinese stocks, which more than doubled last year, became highly volatile after the Spring Festival. The Shanghai Composite Index hit an all-time high of 3,040 in the first post-festival session before plunging 9 per cent, the sharpest fall in a decade, in the following session. Then the index recovered nearly half of the loss Wednesday, thanks to news about Wen's article.

Ping An is the second insurance shares in the A-share market after China Life, the country's top insurer, which made its Shanghai debut on January 9.

Thirty-per cent of Ping An's 1.15 billion-share offer was sold to strategic investors with a lock-up period of 12 months, with another 230 million shares going to ordinary institutional investors with a lock-up period of three months, while the remaining 575 million shares were offered to retail investors.

Ping An's Hong Kong shares have more than doubled in value in the past 52 weeks as investors eye the insurance sector's booming growth as Beijing dismantles a cradle-to-grave welfare system.

Headquartered in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province, Ping An is a diversified financial holding group founded in 1988. It offers integrated securities, trust and banking services with insurance as its core business.



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