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Big China Bank Listing Draws Least Retail Demand Since 2015

Massive China Bank Listing Draws Least Retail Demand Since 2015

(Bloomberg) -- China’s biggest stock listing since 2010 is drawing the lowest demand from retail investors in almost half a decade, amid signs stock market exuberance is waning and concern over the country’s troubled banking system.

Seeking to raise as much as 32.7 billion yuan ($4.6 billion) from a listing in Shanghai, state-owned lender Postal Savings Bank of China Co. saw the deal about 79 times oversubscribed by retail investors, according to an exchange filing late Thursday. That would be the lowest level for a mainland listing since that of China National Nuclear Power Co. in 2015, right before the country’s stock market crashed later that month.

The listing comes amid a flurry of initial public offerings that have faded quickly. Trading activity in China is slowing and there has been a steady decline in new stock accounts, signaling a lack of exuberance in China’s stock market.

Big China Bank Listing Draws Least Retail Demand Since 2015

At the same time, warning signs are flashing in China’s banking market. The government has this year seized and bailed out lenders amid a surge in bad debt as economic growth slows. It has also pressured banks to step up lending, potentially squeezing margins.

“Investors worry Postal Bank may fall below the offer price after listing, given that its valuation is even more expensive than that of the big four banks,” said Guo Feng, head of wealth management at Northeast Securities Co. in Shanghai.

Earlier this week, China Zheshang Bank Co. suffered the worst mainland trading debut since Haixin Foods Co. in 2012, and is down almost 5% since listing.

Compared with similar sized deals, Postal Bank’s retail demand was weak. Foxconn Industrial Internet Co. was 292 times covered for its 27 billion yuan IPO last year while Guotai Junan Securities Co. was 148 times oversubscribed in a 30 billion yuan listing in 2015.

IPOs in China are usually hundreds or even thousands of times oversubscribed, given investors are not required to pay for their bids before getting an allocation.

There’s now a chance that more investors will give up their allocations than they did in the Zheshang Bank listing, according to Guo. Investors didn’t follow through on 66 million yuan in allocated shares in that IPO, according to an exchange filing.

Investors who receive allocations for Postal Bank’s listing are required to complete payment for their subscriptions on Monday. The lender fell 1.2% in Hong Kong on Friday.

--With assistance from Siying He.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Ken Wang in Beijing at ywang1690@bloomberg.net;Amy Li in Shanghai at yli677@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Sofia Horta e Costa at shortaecosta@bloomberg.net, Jonas Bergman, David Watkins

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

With assistance from Bloomberg