男友太凶猛1v1高h,大地资源在线资源免费观看 ,人妻少妇精品视频二区,极度sm残忍bdsm变态

  Home>News Center>China
       
 

Shares end at 6-year lows as textiles dive
(Agencies)
Updated: 2005-05-23 16:40

China's shares closed at their lowest levels in six years on Monday after the key index suffered its biggest single-day loss in seven months as investors cashed out of textile stocks following a rise in export tariffs.

The higher tariffs, which apply to 74 textile lines from June 1, were imposed to cool a trade dispute with the United States and the European Union.


A stock investor lowers his head in the securities office in Shanghai as the index dives May 23, 2005. The The benchmark Shanghai composite index , which had chalked up a string of successive six-year lows this month, closed at 1,070.844 points, its lowest close since May 18, 1999, when it finished at 1,059.87. [newsphoto]
The benchmark Shanghai composite index , which had chalked up a string of successive six-year lows this month, closed at 1,070.844 points, its lowest close since May 18, 1999, when it finished at 1,059.87.

It shed 2.6 percent on Monday, the biggest single day fall since October 14, 2004, when it dived 3.9 percent.

Analysts said the key index was likely to continue falling this week to test the psychologically key 1,050 point level.

Several textile counters fell their 10 percent daily limits to lead most decliners. Garment maker Shanshan Co. Ltd. fell to 3.56 yuan, while knitwear producer Feiya Textile Co. Ltd. slipped to 4.10 yuan.

China's index has dived 15.4 percent so far in 2005, matching in less than five months the fall in 2004 that made it the world's worst-performing major index, hit by a slew of negative factors including Beijing's economic-cooling steps.

"Many investors have trimmed their positions as they expect sustained efforts to cool the economy to hurt corporate bottom lines," said Zheng Weigang, a senior analyst at Shanghai Securities.

Large-caps were also hit, with Sinopec Corp. , Asia's largest refiner and the largest capitalised firm on the mainland bourses, shedding 3.7 percent to 3.66 yuan on Monday.

The stock fell on worries that falling crude prices might trigger price cuts in oil products and erode its bottom line.

No significant cash injection into stockmarket

China sees its ailing stockmarkets as significant to the overall health of its economy but will not be pumping in public funds to prop them up anytime soon.

China Securities and Regulatory Commission (CSRC) chairman Shang Fulin told the Financial Times the problem had to be resolved gradually by shareholders of each company rather than through an ambitious government-led plan.

"The CSRC or any other government authority are not in the position to produce a solution or impose a plan," Shang was quoted as saying.

"We believe that the overhang of non-tradeable shares should be settled between the two types of shareholders by consultation and negotiation."

In April the CSRC chose four companies as a first step to an experimental programme under which the non-tradeable shares would be listed and the state's massive holdings that make up around two-thirds of the stockmarkets more than 400 million dollars in market capitalisation would be gradually reduced.

Shang said the response had been positive, but did not say when the next companies would be named or how quickly the regulator planned to proceed.

The market reacted by hitting fresh six-year lows, highlighting the chronic lack of confidence and continued worries about the impact on liquidity which has dogged the market for years.

Regulators tried to resolve the overhang of the state shares in 2001 to raise funding for China's fledgling social security system but panicked investors sent stocks plunging, forcing authorities to shelve the plan.

Since then, Beijing has repeatedly vowed to fix the problem but has balked at private and institutional investor demands that their interests be protected in any sale program.

At the heart of the matter is vested investors fear that their holdings would be severely diluted unless enough extra cash was available to soak up the additional stock coming into the market.

The CSRC said it would "adjust the size and pace" of flotations as the process moved ahead.

Shang also said the CSRC was discussing a plan with other parts of the government to increase the amount overseas investors could put in China under the Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor scheme.

Shang said investors in listed companies would not be compensated for dilution of their holdings through the sale of state-owned shares.

But owners of non-tradeable shares, in other words the government, should pay a certain amount to shareholders to have the shares listed.



 
  Today's Top News     Top China News
 

Vice Premier Wu Yi cancels meeting with Koizumi

 

   
 

Shares end at 6-year lows as textiles dive

 

   
 

Local textile sales will offset export curbs

 

   
 

China ready to counter US space plans

 

   
 

China says no timetable on yuan reform

 

   
 

Poultry gets bird flu vaccine in Qinghai

 

   
  Can China build its own Silicon Valley?
   
  Local textile sales will offset export curbs
   
  Biotechnology could sustain economy, gov't told
   
  Sudan commits to co-operation with China
   
  Fund aids budding business people
   
  Ocean study to look at sea resources
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Related Stories  
   
China shares snap six-day losing streak
   
Shares dip to 68-month low in Shanghai
   
Shares greet 2005 by ending at 5-year nadir
   
Government opens more financing channels
   
Government's proactive policy pushes shares up
   
New proposals on non-tradable shares under review
   
Stock ticks 7-month low on bearish sentiment
  News Talk  
  It is time to prepare for Beijing - 2008  
Advertisement
         
主站蜘蛛池模板: 容城县| 江源县| 安仁县| 水富县| 武功县| 平安县| 车险| 雷波县| 英山县| 深水埗区| 平乐县| 特克斯县| 清水河县| 南城县| 章丘市| 克什克腾旗| 博湖县| 阿拉尔市| 安福县| 兖州市| 沁源县| 沧州市| 清河县| 云阳县| 平舆县| 星子县| 常山县| 南和县| 广宁县| 漳州市| 潞城市| 延安市| 溆浦县| 进贤县| 灵寿县| 云南省| 隆安县| 昆山市| 哈密市| 十堰市| 昔阳县|