China's financial markets in April saw a month-on-month decline in bond 
issues and a sharp increase in stock indices, sources with the People's Bank of 
China, the central Bank, said on Friday. 
Last month saw bonds valued at 
476.7 billion yuan issued on the interbank market, a decrease of 59.3 percent 
from the March level. Bond prices remained largely stable amid a downward trend 
due to interest rate hikes for deposits and credit extension.
According 
to central bank sources, bonds valued at 2.6 trillion yuan (338 billion U.S. 
dollars) were issued on China's interbank market in the first four months of 
this year, a growth of 40.13 percent on the previous year. 
The total 
included 146.6 billion yuan worth of book-entry treasure bonds issued by the 
Ministry of Finance, 2.1 trillion yuan worth of central-bank bonds, 235 billion 
yuan worth of financial bonds issued by policy banks and commercial banks and 
82.2 billion yuan worth of short-term bonds issued by enterprises. 
Since 
the beginning of the year, China's equity market has been robust, with stock 
indices soaring. 
The benchmark Shanghai Stock Composite Index concluded 
April trading at 3,841.27 points, up 1,125.55 points, or 41.4 percent, since the 
beginning of the year.
 
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