China's equity bubble is building, may bust (chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2007-05-07 10:30

China's all-time high equity market needs "cool water and cool heads" after
taking a 7-day Golden Week breather, otherwise the stock bubble runs the
danger of a quick bust, experts said.

Since its nine-percent correction in late February, the Shanghai A-share
equities have now moved back up more than 40 percent, and no letup is seen
on the horizon, buoyed by a series of successful initial public offerings as
the ranks of investors swell at over 200,000 a day. There are now more than
91 million accounts held at brokers or mutual funds.

Xia Bing, director of the State Council's Development and Research Center's
Finance Department, warned at a recent CCTV talk show program, that the
stock market bubble is building. He and a string of other economists
suggested investors take extra caution before jumping onto the bandwagon.

And, analysts at BCA Research put it in a recent note to its customers: "We
have no doubt if China's market continues to spike up, the stage will be set
for a very violent drop."

In late April, the People's Bank of China ordered the ratio of commercial
banks deposits at the central bank be raised to 11 percent, but the measure
failed to dampen the bullish market. The surge has continued. Many
economists are anticipating another interest rate hike in May or June to
stonewall the soar.

Some critics argue the way the mainland IPO market is being run
systematically fans the irrational expectations of a huge number of novice
investors with the promise of easy and quick money, storing up trouble
ahead.

It is widely believed that mainland investors are mostly momentum-driven and
ignorant of valuations, but they can see the IPO market is serving up a
bargain. While stocks in the A-share market trade at stiff premiums to Hong
Kong, dual-listed equities often continue to list at a discount in the
mainland.

The situation is due to the influence of the powerful China Securities
Regulatory Commission (CSRC) which micromanages new listings, sets final
pricing of IPOs and subsequent fund-raisings as well as deciding who gets to
list, analysts said.

For example, Bank of Communications recently listed at 7-20% cheaper in
Shanghai than in Hong Kong, following a similar practice for China Life
Insurance and Ping An Insurance.

In most other competitive markets, pricing is a commercial compromise based
on what companies think they can get and what investment banks think the
market can take.

A standard move these days is for the CRSR to force companies to set a lower
price on their IPOs in the hope of a strong stock market performance. This
has undoubtedly contributed to the general market euphoria. The average
price-to-earnings ratio of Shanghai and Shenzhen markets is now over 50.

In the absence of traditional measures to cool the market such as
significantly raising interest rates, another solution the authorities, in
the hope to achieve a stronger and more stable market, are eyeing to bolster
the stock market is by adding more quality companies to soak up excess
liquidity.

The authorities have inspired mainland companies to list on domestic bourses
rather than Hong Kong's, it has further encouraged overseas quality
companies, such as the venerable HSBC Holdings to list A-shares in the
mainland.

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