REFILE-HK shares close at 1-yr low; China Comm Cons drops 04 Sep 2008 17:02
* Stocks hurt by earnings, economic slowdown concerns
* China Communications Construction tumbles on downgrades - Yet another downgrade!
* Shipping stocks roiled by global slowdown fears
(Refiles to include final closing prices) (Updates to close)
By Parvathy Ullatil
HONG KONG, Sept 4 (Reuters) - Hong Kong shares fell 1 percent to close at a one-year low on Thursday, weighed by earnings concerns amid slowing economic growth, while China Communications Construction <1800.HK> plummeted on broker downgrades.
China's top builder of highways and ports tumbled 13.7 percent to HK$10.74, its lowest level in 15 months, as analysts forecast softening investment growth in China's construction sector and further raw material price hikes. The stock was the most actively traded issue of the day.
Citigroup cut its rating on the stock to sell from hold with a reduced target price of HK$11.20, while Deutsche Bank downgraded the company to hold from buy, slashing its target price to HK$13.70 from HK$20.50. Both the notes were dated Sept. 3.
"It's easier for a broker to downgrade a stock because that usually gets a strong reaction from this market. Investors hardly buy on upgrades anymore," said Steven Leung, director with UOB Kay Hian. - to generate commissions???
The benchmark Hang Seng Index <.HSI> was down 195.58 points at 20,389.48, its lowest close since August 17, 2007.
Mainboard turnover rose slightly to HK$56.5 billion ($7.2 billion) from HK$56.1 billion on Wednesday.
"The next two or three days are extremely critical as liquidation sales in commodities should help the market find its bottom quickly from here on," said Alex Wong, director with Ample Finance Group. - Still hopeful!
The Hang Seng has fallen in 14 of the last 21 sessions but intermittent gains like a sharp post-earnings relief rally last month have kept the index from breaking below 20,000 points.
The HSI has lost more than 26 percent so far this year and 35 percent from its October 2007 highs.
Shares in China Netcom <0906.HK> closed 2.2 percent higher, after jumping close to 6 percent earlier, after Spain's Telefonica <TEF.MC> said it had agreed to expand its stake in the Chinese carrier by 5.74 percent for up to 802 million euros ($1.16 billion) [ID:nNL438586].
Shares in wireless operator Unicom <0762.HK>, which is merging with Netcom under a government-orchestrated reorganisation of the world's largest telecoms industry, also gained 2 percent.
The China Enterprises Index <.HSCE> of top Hong Kong-listed mainland Chinese firms fell 1.4 percent.
Bulk shipping companies continued their downtrend, falling in line with a 4.9 percent overnight slump on the global freight index.
The Baltic Dry Index <.BADI>, which measures changes in the cost of shipping commodities, fell for an 11 straight session to hit a seven-month low on Wednesday on deepening concern over a global economic slowdown which would erode demand for commodities. - Conditions deteriorating...
China Cosco <1919.HK>, the nation's largest shipping conglomerate, dropped 6.2 percent to HK$12.40, its lowest level in more than a year, while China Shipping Development <1138.HK> fell 5.1 percent.
Chinese beverage-makers continued to rally after China Huiyuan Juice <1886.HK> announced a landmark $2.5 billion takeover bid from Coca-Cola <KO.N> on Wednesday.
Beer brewer Kingway Brewery Holdings <0124.HK>, which is slated to announce its interim earnings today, soared 23.5 percent.
Huiyuan's closest rival, China Haisheng Juice <0359.HK>, advanced 2 percent after falling on Wednesday.
But Huiyuan Juice slid 7.7 percent to HK$10.48 after gaining more than 160 percent on Wednesday. The stock is trading well below the HK$12.20 per share offered by Coca-Cola as some investors are concerned over whether the deal will go through without a hitch. (Reporting by Parvathy Ullatil; Editing by Lincoln Feast) (([email protected]; +852 28436415; Reuters Messaging: [email protected])) Keywords: MARKETS HONG KONG STOCKS