China Everbright Bank's shares rose 18.06 percent at close after their debut in Shanghai on Wednesday, a better-than-expected performance for the roughly $3 billion IPO that underlines continued interest in banking stocks.
Everbright Bank's shares opened at 3.37 yuan ($0.50) and closed at 3.66 yuan, compared with their IPO price of 3.10 yuan. The broader Shanghai index closed down 0.21 percent Wednesday, at 2,666.3 points.
China's No 11 lender set a lower-than-expected price range of 2.85-3.10 yuan for the IPO, in which it could raise as much as 21.7 billion yuan in China's second-biggest IPO this year if it exercises a greenshoe, or over-allotment option.
The mid-sized lender sold 6.1 billion shares in the offering, which could be expanded to 7 billion shares with the over-allotment.
Everbright Bank's debut is being watched closely as a barometer of investor enthusiasm toward banking shares amid rising concerns over lenders' asset quality due to a weak real estate market and massive local government borrowings.
Everbright Bank joined rivals in tapping the stock market for fresh capital after a 2009 lending binge blew a hole in their balance sheets.
The bank's listing also marks the culmination of a three-year toil by Chairman Tang Shuangning -- also a well-known calligrapher -- to transform it from a mismanaged lender saddled with billions of dollars in bad debts to a healthy institution.
With more than 400 branches across the country, Everbright Bank is controlled by Central Huijin, the investment arm of China's $300 billion sovereign wealth fund. Hong Kong-listed China Everbright, the Beijing-based financial conglomerate, directly owns 6.4 percent of Everbright Bank, company data showed.作文地带整理
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