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China has stock 'bubble' - Li Ka-shing(Bloomberg)Updated: 2007-05-18 15:24 Li Ka-shing, Asia's richest man, said China's stock valuations "must be a bubble" and prices are likely to decline. "As a Chinese, I'm worried about the stock market in China," Li, 78, told reporters in Hong Kong Thursday. He joins central bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan in saying China's stock prices are excessive and spoke a day after Premier Wen Jiabao warned of "problems" for the economy.
"Domestic investors are getting too sanguine about investing in the market," said Teo Joo Wah, who helps manage about $2 billion at Fullerton Fund Management Co., a unit of Singapore's state-owned investment company Temasek Holdings Pte. China's CSI 300 has a valuation of 43 times estimated earnings. Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index, which has gained 5.2 percent in 2007, is at 16 times. The number of brokerage accounts set up to buy mainland shares and mutual funds amounted to 327,019 Wednesday, according to the China Depository & Clearing Corp. Investors opened a record 385,121 new accounts on May 8. "You've got to be cautious when you see that many investment accounts being opened," Fullerton's Teo said. ADRs Fall The Bank of New York China ADR index, which tracks American depositary receipts of Chinese companies trading in the U.S., slipped 1.7 percent as of 10:31 a.m. in New York. Shares of China Life Insurance Co., the country's largest insurer, dropped 64 cents to $50.12 on the New York Stock Exchange. China Telecom Corp., the nation's biggest fixed-line telephone carrier, declined $1.84 to $54.64. Comments from Li resonate in Asia and in Hong Kong, where he's known as "Superman" for his investment acumen. He invested in the Hong Kong initial public offering of Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd., while his flagship property company Cheung Kong (Holdings) Ltd. and a separate Li foundation each bought $10 million of shares in the April share sale of China Molybdenum Co. The stock has since risen 84 percent. 'Right Calls' "Mr. Li has a reputation of making the right calls," said Kenny Tang, associate director at Hong Kong-based Tung Tai Securities Ltd. "But I don't think his comment will immediately trigger a panic sell-off. It'll probably remind people to be more cautious and stay alert." Investors are flocking to the stock market to benefit from rising corporate earnings in an economy that has grown 10 percent in each of the last four years. Profits at Chinese companies listed in the A-share market grew 82 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier, beating analyst estimates, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said in a May 10 research note. The rise in China's shares has made the nation's stocks the most expensive among the world's major markets. Goldman Sachs and Credit Suisse Group analysts have in the past week said they may face a "correction." The government has said it will try and slow the pace of economic growth to
prevent a bubble. Premier Wen Wednesday said excess liquidity is a concern.
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