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Index breaks 3,000 barrier, 02/26
By Jin Jing (China Daily)
Updated: 2007-02-27 09:04

Index breaks 3,000 barrier, 02/26
Investors monitor yesterday's stock market performance at a trading house in Yichang, Central China's Hubei Province. The Shanghai Composite Index rose 1.4 percent yesterday to close at 3,041 points. [China Daily]

After the long Spring Festival break, the Shanghai stock market resumed its upward trend on Monday, sending the key indicator up 1.4 percent to a record high of 3,041 points.

This was the first time the index had closed past the 3,000-point barrier.

The Shanghai Composite Index, the most widely watched indicator of the mainland stock market, rose 42 points, with 728 stocks of the 907 closing higher.

Turnover on the Shanghai Stock Exchange amounted to 91 billion yuan, slightly less than the 94 billion yuan on February 16 before the market closed for the holiday.

Stocks in the non-ferrous metals sector rose the most, nearly all of them up yesterday. Jiangxi Copper and Yunnan Copper surged to their daily limits to close at 17.7 yuan and 18.3 yuan respectively, encouraged by strong international copper commodity prices. Yunnan Aluminum, which posted a 122 percent growth in net profit for 2006, surged 6 percent to close at 16 yuan.

Companies in the steel industry also performed well. Baotou Steel jumped to its daily limit to close at 5 yuan. Baosteel, the largest iron and steelmaker in China, surged 8 percent to close at 10 yuan. "Investors are turning to steel stocks, which they consider to be undervalued," said Zhang Yidong, an analyst at Industrial Securities.

Analysts said the rally yesterday was partly influenced by the strong performance on international stock markets, which continued to grow during Spring Festival. And good results at many major listed companies in 2006 further boosted the booming Chinese market.

A total of 157 companies on the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges released their annual reports before Spring Festival, showing a 110 percent increase in aggregate profit from 2005.

"The surging profits of listed companies set the foundation for continuous growth in 2007," said Chen Zhou, a fund manager from Guotai Fund Management.


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