Hong Kong - Shares for Industrial & Commercial
Bank of China soared in Hong Kong but disappointed investors in Shanghai on
Friday as China's largest lender launched the world's biggest initial public
offering in the two stock markets.
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VIP guests attend the ceremony of
initial public offering of Industrial & Commercial Bank of China
(ICBC) October 27, 2006 at Shanghai Stock Exchange in Shanghai.
ICBC's shares began trading Friday in Shanghai, part of a dual initial
public offering with the Hong Kong Stock Exchange that raised a record
US$21.9 billion (euro17.4 billion). [AP Photo] More about the ICBC
IPO
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ICBC's US$21.9 billion stock sale smashed the previous record, a US$18.4
billion IPO by Japanese mobile phone company NTT DoCoMo Inc. in 1998.
The stock's price rocketed up 14.6 percent to HK$3.52 (US$0.45) compared to
its IPO price of HK$3.07 (US$0.39) per share. Analysts predicted the stock would
rise between 10 percent to 15 percent.
The state-owned bank made history by simultaneously listing its IPO in
Shanghai, but its "A shares" only gained 5.1 percent from their IPO price to
close at 3.28 yuan. They had also been expected to shoot up 10 percent to 15
percent.
The weaker-than-expected debut might have been due to how stocks have slumped
for the Bank of China, the country's second-biggest lender, said Zhuang Qianhua,
an analyst at Huatai Securities. The bank's IPO rose 23 percent on July 5 in
Shanghai but has been on a downward track ever since.
"I think it may be the memory of Bank of China's debut that deterred
investors today," Zhuang said.
In the past year, three of China's Big Four banks have successfully gone
public, selling US$42 billion worth of stock to international investors.
"They are buying for the China growth story," Francis Lun, general manager,
Fulbright Securities Ltd., in Hong Kong. "China's economy is growing by 10
percent a year and ICBC is the largest bank in China. If it grows in tandem with
the Chinese economy, I think it should be worth much, much more in the future."
But Lun noted that Chinese banks can be a risky investment because of a
history of bad loans and bad management. ICBC received a US$15 billion injection
from the government to clean up its balance sheet last year.
"If ICBC can clean up its balance sheet, improve its management and if nobody
runs away with several hundreds of millions of dollars, that's the most
important thing," Lun said.
Yiping Huang, economist at Citigroup in Shanghai, said much will depend on
how the health of China's economy.
"The economy has been doing so well. When the economy is doing well, we don't
see big financial risks," Huang said, noting that a slowdown would likely result
in more bad debts.
In Shanghai, ICBC President Yang Kaisheng kicked off trading by banging on a gong, and he
and other executives celebrated by sipping glasses of wine passed out by women
in silk red dresses.
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Yang Kaisheng, vice chairman and
president of Industrial & Commercial Bank of China (ICBC)
(R) celebrates after striking the trade starting gong during the
ceremony of initial public offering of ICBC, October 27, 2006 at Shanghai
Stock Exchange in Shanghai. ICBC's shares began trading Friday in
Shanghai, part of a dual initial public offering with the Hong Kong Stock
Exchange that raised a record US$21.9 billion (euro17.4 billion). [AP
Photo] More about the ICBC IPO
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"We will take this public offering as the first step, and continue to strive
toward our goal of becoming a first-rate international financial enterprise,"
Yang said. "We will use better business and quality service to repay investors
and our many customers."
Before clinking champagne glasses with leaders in Hong Kong, ICBC Chairman
Jiang Jianqing gave a speech on the stock market's floor just ahead of trading.
Jiang said the bank was a market leader that will continue to modernize.
"ICBC has a strong customer base, a large network of branches, a solid
management style, leading technology. It's the leader in all the main business
areas in the Chinese market," Jiang said.
The IPO's timing for the gargantuan bank, whose assets totaled 6.45 trillion
yuan (US$816 billion) at the end of last year, couldn't be better.
After years of languishing in post dot-com bust and scandal-related doldrums,
Shanghai's market has finally taken off, trading near five-year highs.
Yuan-denominated A shares are up nearly 56 percent since the beginning of the
year.
And Hong Kong's benchmark Hang Seng Index surged 1.1 percent to a record high
of 18,353.74 on Thursday.
Over the past decade, China's best companies, such as PetroChina Co., Sinopec
Corp. and China Mobile (Hong Kong) Ltd., have chosen to list shares in Hong Kong
and other markets outside China, given the lackluster outlook for the domestic
exchanges.
Current regulations prevent most Chinese mainland from openly investing
in Hong Kong shares, and bar most foreign investors from buying yuan-denominated
mainland shares.
But in the past year, regulators have carried out carefully orchestrated
shareholding reforms aimed at shifting government-held, nontradable shares into
the market. Most of the shares affected are subject to lockup periods, helping
to alleviate uncertainties over a possible flood of new shares hitting the
market.
The giant bank's trading debut marks a milestone in more than two decades of
reforms aimed at transforming Chinese state-run lenders into truly commercial
banks.
Goldman Sachs Group Inc., American Express Co. and Allianz AG of Germany
together paid US$3.8 billion for an 8.89 percent stake in ICBC this
year.