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The
Chinese stock market picked up in 2006 after an extended
period of regulation and rectification.
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There
is generally standing room only at onsite security company
stock investment lectures.
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Liu
Bing discusses market trends with fellow stockholders.
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LIU Bing is reticent about how much he has actually made on the
Chinese stock market in the past tumultuous decade. I invested
here and there over the years without keeping an exact record
of exactly how much I put in, Liu recalls. But he does admit
to having done well in the bull market of 2006. My stock
assets are now almost triple what they were in early 2006,
he says, with evident satisfaction.
Having experienced ups and downs on the market throughout the
decade, Liu Bing now appears immune to its caprices.
The First Crock of Gold
Liu Bing entered the stock market in 1996, at the time he worked
at the Shenzhen branch of a Hong Kong real estate company. Hong
Kongs imminent return had a positive effect on the Shenzhen
stock market, evident in its successful rallying after a three-year-long
bear market.
Both the Shenzhen and Shanghai Stock Exchanges were established
in late 1990. By early 1996, the Shenzhen Stock Exchange index
had fallen to an all-time low. After the Spring Festival (or Lunar
New Year) of 1997, however, it began gradually to rise. The
market environment created by Hong Kongs prospective return
in 1997 is comparable to that engendered today by the Beijing
2008 Olympic Games, Liu Bing observes. Encouraged by the
bull market, and swept up in the generally speculative mood of
his fellow local citizens, Liu Bing invested all his savings,
despite knowing next-to-nothing about stocks or stock market dealings.
The rookie investor Liu Bing made frequent buying
and selling transactions. As a result, he recalls, The money
I actually earned was insufficient to pay the necessary transaction
fees and taxes. This is a mistake that distinguishes new
investors. Liu Bing points out, As the majority of Chinese
stockholders are completely new to the game, they are excessively
speculative, reacting to the slightest market fluctuation. The
annual stock turnover rate on longer-established foreign stock
markets is less than 40 percent, while Chinas is more than
600 percent a 15-fold disparity.
Liu was lucky enough to have entered the stock market and earn
his first crock of gold while it was on an upward
curve. From April 1 to December 12 of 1996, the Shanghai Stock
Exchange (SSE) Composite Index rose by 124 percent, while the
Shenzhen Stock Exchange (SZSE) Component Index went up 346 percent.
The prices on 100 stocks rose by 500 percent or more. Such fortuitous
circumstances made it difficult not to make a profit. Liu remembers
clearly his first stock transaction: I bought Sihuan Biology,
trading code 0518, at RMB 1.38 per share. Its now worth
more than RMB 10. Ten years on, Liu is so familiar with
the stock market that he knows practically all the stock trading
codes by heart.
Market Regulation
Liu Bing has also experienced losses on certain transactions.
The most financially damaging was his purchase of ST Jiuzhou stocks
at RMB 30 per share. His decision was based purely on the rumor
that the stock belonged to the relative of an important central
government leader. ST Jiuzhou dropped to RMB 16 the next day and
never picked up. It has since disappeared from sight on the market.
As Liu Bing recalls, The stock market was in disarray at
the time, which made small individual buyers like me very vulnerable.
Institutional players and big investors manipulated the market
at the cost of small private investors in order to achieve big
profits. Much malpractice occurred, such as illicit utilization
of funds raised on the stock market by listed companies, and information
leaks.
These were the dark days preceding the 2001-2006 stock market
rectification. The China Securities Regulatory Commission was
established in 2001. Its first task was to crack down on crafty
stock manipulators. The Commissions unremitting efforts
resulted in the exposure and penalization of dozens of listed
companies. The Commission also regulated information disclosure
by listed companies, standardized their entrusted financial management
and established a delisting procedure. The stock market remained
stagnant during the rectification period, which effectively rendered
Liu Bing and other stockholders dormant. But he never lost hope,
realizing that he and other individual investors stood to benefit
from rectification.
The luckiest year for Liu Bing and other individual stockholders
was 2006. That was the year the Chinese stock market took a crucial
upward turn after an extended period of stagnancy. It was also
in 2006 that the substantially revised Security Law and the Company
Law of the Peoples Republic of China came into effect. Amendments
to the Security Law enabled establishment of a legal framework
for stock market innovation, and adjusted the scope of derivative
securities. It also extended the scope of products on the market,
and expanded channels through which legitimate funds could enter
the capital market. This made it possible for institutional investors,
such as state-owned enterprises and holding companies, to buy
and sell stocks. The year 2006 also saw a 130.43 percent rise
in the SSE Composite Index, and a 132.12 percent rise in the SZSE
Component Index.
An Economy That Merits Long-Term Investment
The names Lin Yuan and Yang Baiwan, both Chinese stock market
stars, frequently crop up in Liu Bings talk
with this reporter. Lin entered the stock market in 1989, armed
with the RMB 8,000 that his whole family had scraped together.
Today, his wealth is valued at RMB 2 billion. Yang Baiwan is also
a pioneer individual investor, whose opening investment capital
was a mere RMB 2,000. At the time other investors thought of tens
of thousands of yuan as undreamed of riches, he was already a
millionaire. The success stories of these two perspicacious investors
motivate many ordinary citizens to venture into the stock market.
During the first quarter of 2007, a record 4,785,900 newly opened
A-share accounts were registered on the stock market. This is
an amount in excess of the entire 2006 annual total, according
to statistics. Many of these new stock market players are retirees.
Liu Bing has made acute observations on the paradoxical nature
of senior spending behavior. He points out that these venerable
citizens live a frugal life, thinking nothing of bargaining with
a street vendor for 10 minutes over fractions of a yuan. Yet they
dont bat an eyelid at the prospect of throwing their life
savings of tens, or sometimes hundreds, of thousands of yuan into
the stock market. Senior investors shop around several markets
before buying the best and cheapest vegetables. But they plunge
headlong into stock market transactions without even taking the
trouble to read up on the listed company in whom they have invested.
They begrudge paying one yuan for a copy of the security market
newspaper, but do not hesitate to pay out tens of thousands yuan
for an investment that could lose them everything.
These instances demonstrate just how irrational Chinese
investors are, and how far they have to go before they can begin
to understand even the fundamentals of financial management,
Liu Bing remarks. He goes on to point out that these forays into
the stock market indicate a growing awareness of the need to manage
family finances, which is an encouraging development. As Liu observes,
In the past, the majority put their money in the bank, unaware
that letting funds lie idle is a waste of social resources.
Liu Bings conclusion after his ten years as an individual
stock market investor is that long-term investment is reliable
as long as the investor has confidence in the Chinese economy.
He cites as an example a friend who bought stock worth RMB 100,000
in 2003. He left it undisturbed until recently, asking Liu where
the relevant security company had moved to. He subsequently discovered
that the value of his account had doubled and redoubled.
The Chinese economy is experiencing healthy development,
as indicated by an annual growth of more than 9 percent. The SSE
index is sure to climb to 6,000 points before the 2008 Olympics.
This was Liu Bings prediction in early 2007, when the SSE
index was dallying at around 4,000 points. At the time of writing
this report 10 months away from the start of the Beijing
Olympics the SSE index stands at 6,100 points.
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