China Daily

A-shares look to be on upward trend this week, observers say

Benchmark Shanghai Composite Index surges 2.68 percent on Monday

- By ZHOU LANXU zhoulanxv@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s A-share market is likely to remain bullish this week, while stock performanc­es may diverge, analysts said.

The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index surged by 2.68 percent to 2754.36 points on Monday, buoyed by a record high credit growth in January and signs of progress in trade talks.

The smaller Shenzhen index closed 3.95 percent higher at 8446.92 points. The ChiNext Index, China’s Nasdaq-style board of growth enterprise­s, soared by 4.11 percent to close at 1413.60 points, according to financial informatio­n provider Wind Info.

A total of 3,548 A shares went up, while only 15 stocks ended down on Monday, with securities firms and manufactur­ers of semiconduc­tors and electronic­s equipment leading the rise.

The A-share market has shaken off last year’s downturn, with the Shanghai Composite Index up 10 percent as of Monday.

“As pressures on the market have been gradually lifted and capital inflow accelerate­d, we expect the market to maintain the uptrend this week,” said a report from the investment consultanc­y of Shenzhen, Guangdong province-headquarte­red Citic Securities on Monday.

Last week, foreign capital accelerate­d its flow into the A-share market, with the net inflow under stock connects hitting 28.37 bil- lion yuan ($4.19 billion), according to informatio­n provider eastmoney.com. Meanwhile, the balance of margin trading saw a rapid recovery of 22.28 billion yuan, showing that investors with high risk appetite have entered the market.

The report further pointed out the broad rise driven by correction in valuation of the oversold market may be replaced by structural gains this week.

Wang Yi, chief strategy analyst with Shenzhen-based Great Wall Securities, agreed. “Companies with good financial performanc­es and relatively certain growth prospects will continue their recovery, while those with worse fundamenta­ls will probably see limited upward room,” Wang said.

Wang noted investment opportunit­ies in technologi­cal innovation sectors this week, covering growth enterprise­s in the 5G, defense, artificial intelligen­ce and new energy vehicle industries.

“As the country will keep rolling out policies to stabilize the economy, related sectors also merit continued attention,” Wang added.

Hu Yunlong, investment director of Beijing-based Kaixing Asset Management Co Ltd, said investors can continue to allocate oversold stocks with rather sound fundamenta­ls this week.

“Patience is important. In the current market condition, winners would hold their target shares and wait for rises.”

Changchun, Jilin provinceba­sed Northeast Securities holds a more prudent attitude toward the market. “As the trade talks go deep into areas where the divergence of the two parties is more substantia­l, more uncertaint­ies will disturb the market,” it said.

Analysts also noted that the current market advances may end in mid-March. “Looking ahead, downward economic pressure and expectatio­ns of further policy easing will jointly influence the market, making fluctuatio­ns inevitable,” said Xie Chao, an analyst from Shanghai-based Everbright Securities.

Companies with good financial performanc­es and relatively certain growth prospects will continue their recovery ... ” Wang Yi, chief strategy analyst with Shenzhen-based Great Wall Securities

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