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China's car sales gain on discounts, new models
China, Japan to co-sponsor CISMEF in S Guangdong
Chongqing to list 10 more companies in two years
Insurers given nod to invest overseas
Danone sues Wahaha for deal-infringement claim
China posts 21% growth in new, high-tech products trade in Jan.-Apr.
carve out
China is world's biggest newspaper market
Yuan set to move in narrow band after gains
Five game firms tipped to float on foreign markets next year
Cell-phone users say roaming fees too high
Petrochemical industry faces challenge from the Middle East
China growth estimate raised at World Bank
Industry
Minsheng Banking leads stocks gain for third day
Car makers eye taxis to highlight reliability, safety
Chinese stock exchanges plunge, down 15% in week
Share volatility delays launch of new products
Domestic stocks decline on fears of new measures
Chinese shares rebound by 1.4 pct on May 31
Mainland IPOs may set record this year


SHANGHAI, June 7 -- CHINESE mainland companies are expected to raise a record amount of money this year in initial public offerings, as they shrug off declines in the key stock index, Ernst & Young LLP said.


Listings on Shanghai's yuan-denominated A-share market may almost double to 280 billion yuan (US$36.7 billion) in 2007, from last year's 146.3 billion yuan, according to an estimate by the New York-based accounting firm.


The "market volatility" in the mainland stock market "won't have a big impact on companies' listing plans," said Ernst & Young's China IPO head Terence Ho yesterday in Shanghai. "Chinese mainland companies have much more desire to list now than they did five years ago."


The mainland's key CSI 300 index trades at an average of 41.8 times reported earnings, more than double the 16 times average on Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index, enabling firms to raise more funds. As many as 40 mainland companies are traded in both Hong Kong and the mainland, where the stocks are priced higher than their Hong Kong issues by between 3.5 percent and eight times, according to Bloomberg News's analytics.


China Mobile, CNOOC Ltd and other Hong Kong-traded mainland companies are planning to sell yuan-denominated A shares, which may almost double the amount of capital raised in 2007, Ho said.


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