BEIJING, Feb. 26 (Xinhua) -- Chinese shares edged up 1.09 percent on Tuesday, as liquidity concerns were eased by regulators' overnight call for more cautious refinancing moves.
The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index closed at 4,238.18, a gain of 45.65 points. The Shenzhen Component Index, however, lost 158.25 points, or 1.02 percent, to end at 15,328.42. The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) issued a statement on Monday evening in which it urged listed firms to "carefully" consider investor demand when seeking to refinance through share offerings.
Analysts said the move, combined with companies' denial of refinancing rumors, mitigated investors' fears but wouldn't fully resolve the liquidity strain. PetroChina, which accounts for around 25 percent of the Shanghai index, gained 2.24 percent to 22.40 yuan (about 3.13 U.S. dollars), and Sinopec, the largest oil refiner, rose 3.52 percent to 16.76 yuan.
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Two stock investors look over information at a stock exchange in Hefei, capital of East China's Anhui Province, Feb. 26, 2008. The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index closed at 4,238.18 on Tuesday, a gain of 45.65 points. The Shenzhen Component Index lost 158.25 points, or 1.02 percent, to end at 15,328.42. (Xinhua Photo)
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China Life surged 4.97 percent to 37.20 yuan. Ping An Insurance climbed 4.07 percent to 68.04 yuan. There remained a gap of perhaps hundreds of billions of yuan between the demand and supply of funds in the market, said Zhang Lei, a Qilu Securities analyst. He said more policies to cut new offerings, rein in large-scale refinancing and approve more fund releases were necessary. Locked-up shares due to become tradable again this year would need to absorb 1.57 trillion yuan in total, while newly-released or split funds could raise at most 129 billion yuan, Zhang said. The CSRC has tried to improve liquidity by accelerating the release of new stock funds and experimenting with fund companies on new channels of stock investment. Six stock funds have been approved for release this month, which was viewed as a clear policy signal to shore up the stock market. Shares in Shanghai tumbled 4.07 percent on Monday amid market talk of refinancing by China Unicom. The country's second-largest mobile operator denied the rumor after its shares plunged by the daily trading lim