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China’s Biggest Stock Listing in Years Barely Gains on Debut

China’s Biggest Stock Listing in Years Barely Gains on Debut

(Bloomberg) -- China’s largest stock debut in years did next to nothing, following signs of weakening sentiment in the world’s second largest equity market.

State-owned lender Postal Savings Bank of China Co. rose only as much as 2.7% Tuesday on its first day in Shanghai. The bank sold its shares at 5.5 yuan apiece, allowing it to raise as much as 32.7 billion yuan ($4.6 billion) if it fully exercises a greenshoe option. That would make it the largest onshore listing since Agricultural Bank of China Ltd. in 2010. The stock closed 2% higher at 5.61 yuan.

China’s Biggest Stock Listing in Years Barely Gains on Debut

For years, mainland stock debuts were a slam-dunk trade after the regulator in 2014 imposed a valuation cap on IPOs, which saw new listings pop 44% on their first trading day. That ended with this year’s launch of the Star board in Shanghai, which has less stringent listing rules. The recent lack of investor confidence last week caused one of those debuts to close below its IPO price, the first time that happened in seven years.

Interest in Postal Bank’s shares had been relatively tepid: its stock sale drew the least retail demand since 2015, forcing underwriters to take up more than 650 million yuan in unsold shares. China Post Group, the parent of Postal Bank, said Sunday it plans to spend at least 2.5 billion yuan to buy the lender’s A shares after its onshore debut.

The Beijing-based lender -- the largest in the world by branch network -- was already listed in Hong Kong. Its H shares were little changed on Tuesday. The lender’s A shares will be added to MSCI China All Shares Index on Dec. 24, the index compiler said on Dec. 10.

The run of faltering listings comes at an awkward time for China, which is beefing up efforts to mitigate funding challenges faced by local firms by widening access to equity financing. Beijing has made it a priority to ensure the country’s capital markets play a bigger role in bolstering economic growth, which has slowed to its weakest rate in almost three decades amid a trade war with the U.S.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Ken Wang in Beijing at ywang1690@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Sofia Horta e Costa at shortaecosta@bloomberg.net, Philip Glamann

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

With assistance from Bloomberg