SHANGHAI: Chinese stocks rose for the third straight trading day yesterday as domestic new loan creation touched a record high in March and Premier1 Wen Jiabao made a positive statement on China's "better than expected" real economy over the weekend.
The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index rose 2.84 percent to close at 2513.7 yesterday. The smaller Shenzhen Component2 Index rallied 2.08 percent to 9539.8 points.
The combined turnover3 on the two bourses soared to 284.9 billion yuan yesterday in choppy trading, up 19.9 percent from last Friday.
China's central bank said new loans hit an all-time high of 1.89 trillion yuan in March, with the gauge4 of broad money supply M2 rising 25.51 percent year-on-year to 5.3 billion yuan.
"The central bank's emphasis over the weekend on sticking to loose monetary5 policy wiped off market concerns on the government's likely move to tighten6 credit, and in turn keep liquidity7 ample in the equities8 market," said Mao Nan, analyst9 of Orient Securities.
Qian Wang, an economist10 at JPMorgan's Asia Economic Research, said: "Some moderation in the loan expansion pace should be expected by the market in the coming months."
Premier Wen's speech on Saturday, saying that China's economy has seen "positive changes", triggered market speculation11 that more policies to accelerate domestic demand are on the anvil12, analysts13 said.
Chinese stock analysts have raised the 2009 earnings14 results of domestic enterprises traded on the mainland's bourses by 4 percent on average as recently released macro figures indicated a fundamental recovery, said Mao.
Coal sector15 led the rally on reports that Shenhua Group and Datong Coal Mining Group are planning to raise coal contract prices to 550 yuan per ton.
Shenhua, the country's largest coal miner, soared to the daily limit of 10 percent and ended at 25.09 yuan yesterday.
"The profit-taking activities in the short term amid the uncertainties16 of unfolding first-quarter earnings reports will add pressure to the market, but there's still room for the market to rise 10-15 percent in three to six months," Mao said.