by winston » Thu Nov 22, 2012 5:54 pm
Chinese Alcohol Makers
Chinese alcohol makers listed in the mainland tumbled further after the official Xinhua news agency reported that Hunan provincial authorities found as much as 1.04 milligrams per kilogram (mg/kg) of plasticisers in samples of Jiugui Liquor's products.
Plasticisers are additives that increase the fluidity of a material, but are also toxic chemicals that can cause damage to men's reproductive health and cause early female puberty when consumed over a long period.
This according to Xinhua, was more than three times above the health ministry's 0.3 mg/kg limit, but was within the 0.495-2.32 mg/kg range the China Alcoholic Drinks Association listed in a statement on Monday, adding that higher-end alcoholic drinks contain higher levels of plasticiser.
Jiugui's Shenzhen shares stayed suspended, as they have been since Monday, but major players in the Chinese white spirits, or baijiu, sector deepened a downward spiral on the month.
Wuliangye Yibin is set for a sixth-straight loss, diving 4.4 percent to its lowest since July 2010. It has now slumped 18.1 percent in November, set for its worst monthly showing in more than four years.
Bigger rival, Kweichow Moutai shed 1.7 percent but went into the midday break off the day's lows, which were also its lowest since April 11.
Moutai was up as much as 28 percent on the year at the end of October, losses of about 13 percent this month have seen this year's gains cut to just more than 11 percent.
Shares of baijiu makers have been on the backfoot since last month on worries over high inventory levels and fears that strong anti-corruption moves would sap demand for the expensive bottles often used as gifts to local government officials.
Source: Reuters
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"