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China weekly update
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Top news of the week
Agricultural Bank of China IPO tests market appetite
Doubts and skepticism about the initial public offer (IPO) of Agricultural Bank of China (ABC) have subsided after pricing details emerged in the past week. The H-shares of the bank, to be traded in Hong Kong, are priced at HK$3.20 per share, in the middle of the pricing range. Meanwhile, its A-share stocks, to be traded in Shanghai, are priced at the top of the range at 2.68 yuan per share. The dual listing is expected to raise more than US$19 billion for ABC, not counting over-subscription. It is not yet clear whether the IPO will surpass the record currently held by rival Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC), which raised US$22 billion in 2006.
Skepticism about ABC's IPO is not unjustified. ABC is the last major state-owned Chinese bank to go public, and is widely believed to have a weaker balance sheet and less attractive growth prospects given its mandate to support China's vast rural economy. The IPO did not come at the best time either - China is the worst-performing market in the world so far this year, down 27 per cent from the end of last year on concerns about slack export orders and slowing fixed asset investment.
However, the naysayers are missing the bigger picture. As China restructures its economy to encourage consumption, inland area development, and urbanization, ABC has a key role to play in the process. Boasting thousands of outlets in far-flung areas of rural China, the bank outnumbers its other state-owned peers - most of which have their branches in urban areas - and has stronger connections with the rural communities. By taking ABC public, China is determined to bring in not only capital but also better transparency and management to the bank, so it can become a healthier and more stable financial institution. After the IPO, the Chinese government will remain the largest shareholder of the bank.
Major shareholders of Agricultural Bank of China

Source: Agricultural Bank of China, Morningstar.
Market recap
Investors returned to the Chinese stockmarket last week after many believed the market was oversold, following an extended slump that brought PE multiples down to an 18-month low and narrowed the valuation gap between stocks traded in Shanghai and in Hong Kong. Comments from the central bank also led investors to believe that China will likely soften its stance on tightening in the second half of 2010. The Shanghai Composite Index rose 3.7 per cent to 2471, while the Shenzhen Composite Index rose 6.4 per cent to 9817.
Macro and industry updates
China raises Japanese treasury holdings
According to official statistics, China purchased a total of 735.2 billion yen (US$8.5 billion) in Japanese treasuries in May, compared to its purchase of 198 billion yen in April and 31 billion yen last May. In fact, the May purchase exceeded the total 541 billion yen of Japanese treasuries purchased in the first four months of 2010. Short-term debt maturing within one year accounts for the bulk of Japanese treasuries China has bought this year. In 2009, China sold a net of 78.7 billion yen in Japanese treasuries. As of March this year, the country's foreign currency reserves stood at US$2.4 trillion, of which about 10 per cent is believed to be yen-denominated assets.
China Development Bank makes Mizuho co-lead underwriter
China Development Bank will make Mizuho a co-lead underwriter for a US$400 million bond offering. Since China opened up the bond underwriting market last July, this is the first time that a foreign lender is acting as a co-lead to underwrite a bond offering of a major Chinese bank. Mizuho will underwrite about a third of this offering, which is denominated in US dollars. HSBC, the first foreign lender to participate in bond underwriting in China, was a member of the underwriting consortium for Chinese yuan-denominated bonds issued by the Bank of Shanghai last November.
Carrefour closes only store in Xi'an
French supermarket giant Carrefour will shut down its only store in Xi'an, a major city in western China, five years after the store was opened. This marks the first store closure for Carrefour in its 15-year history in China. In 2009, rival Wal-Mart's number of total stores in China surpassed Carrefour for the first time. Wal-Mart has 180 stores in 94 Chinese cities, compared to approximately 150 stores run by Carrefour.
Corn prices hit record high in China
Corn prices rose to a 10-year high recently, as corn processing companies pushed up prices significantly due to fears of a supply shortage caused by last year's severe drought in China's northeast. Reports of a recent jump in corn imports to China, which normally can satisfy demand with domestic production, further fanned fears of a shortage and led farmers to hoard their produce in anticipation of better prices. Prices remained at elevated levels even after the government stepped in by selling corn reserves. China consumes about 150 million tons of corn each year.
Contributions from Iris Tan and Zhao Hu.
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