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Stocks dive 3% to fresh low
(China Daily)
Updated: 2008-09-18 13:55
Stocks dive 3% to fresh low

China's main stock index fell nearly 3 percent to a new 22-month closing low yesterday, led by bank shares, which continued to be hurt by the turmoil in the global financial industry.

Four banking shares plunged their 10 percent daily limits, after eight such shares dropped by that margin on Tuesday.

Dairy producers also tumbled after State television said a government probe found 22 of 109 companies checked had produced milk contaminated with the toxic compound melamine, which has sickened thousands of babies.

The Shanghai Composite Index finished down 2.9 percent at 1929.047 points, near the day's low of 1922.680, in thin trade. That left it down 69 percent from last October's record peak.

The index sank 4.47 percent on Tuesday, bringing it below the 2000-point level, which many analysts and investors had seen as important support. Some analysts now see no technical support above the 2004 peak of 1783 points.

Falling stocks in Shanghai outnumbered gainers by 691 to 225 yesterday, while turnover in Shanghai A shares shrank to 31.9 billion yuan from Tuesday's 33.7 billion yuan.

"The risk of exposure to Lehman Brothers, the problem in the milk industry, the possibility of companies going into the red in the third quarter - it's clear why confidence is evaporating," said Zhang Yanbing, analyst at Zheshang Securities.

China Merchants Bank, which tumbled its 10 percent daily limit on Tuesday, plunged a further 10 percent to 14.46 yuan yesterday in its heaviest turnover since April, after saying it held $70 million of debt in bankrupt Lehman Brothers and had not yet set aside any provisions for potential losses.

The biggest bank, Industrial & Commercial Bank of China, also slid 10 percent, to 3.42 yuan. Bank of China dropped 6.31 percent to 2.97 yuan, bringing the stock for the first time below the 3.08 yuan price in its Shanghai IPO, conducted in 2006.

Some analysts and fund managers think the market has become irrational. Chinese banks are not as exposed to the global turmoil as foreign institutions; Merchants Bank's $70 million of Lehman debt is tiny compared to its net profit of $1.94 billion in the first half of this year.

But investors are also disappointed that a surprise monetary easing announced by China's central bank on Monday may actually squeeze banks' profit margins, since benchmark lending rates were cut and deposit rates left unchanged.

"Pessimistic and desperate is what investors are feeling right now. When even such heavily weighted shares tumble like this, who can expect the index to stay firm," said Qian Xiangjing, analyst at CITIC-Kington Securities.

Agencies


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