China Is Least Favored Market in Asia, Citigroup Says (Update2) 
By Chua Kong Ho
http://www.bloomberg
com/apps/news?pid=20602005&sid=a6ilIfPDtOd4&refer=world_indices
Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) -- China, home to the world's best- performing stock
market last year, is now the least favored in Asia outside of Japan for the
region's funds, according to Citigroup Inc. 
China overtook Taiwan and South Korea as the most ``underweight'' market for
the first time, Citigroup analysts including Elaine Chu wrote in a Jan. 25
report. 
The CSI 300 Index is valued at 43 times reported earnings even after sliding
18 percent from its record close on Oct. 16. That makes the benchmark dearer
than the Nikkei 225 Stock Average and the MSCI Asia Pacific excluding Japan
Index, which are both at 16 times profit. 
``Valuations still look expensive at this level,'' said Erwin Sanft, head of
China and Hong Kong equities research at BNP Paribas Securities (Asia) Ltd.,
in an interview. ``This is really the last throes of the bull market. We're
still going to see lower index levels from here.'' 
The CSI 300, which tracks yuan-denominated stocks traded in Shanghai and
Shenzhen, gained 162 percent last year, the most among the 90 global indexes
tracked by Bloomberg. Stocks gained as investors bet on growth in the world
s fastest-growing major economy fueling corporate earnings. 
The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index, which measures the ``H shares'' of
Chinese companies traded in Hong Kong, climbed 56 percent in 2007. The Hong
Kong index has lost 35 percent from its Oct. 30 peak, leaving it valued at
20 times earnings. 
Winter Snowstorms 
The two stock benchmarks fell today after the worst winter snowstorms to hit
China in a decade disrupted transportation as well as fuel and power
production. The CSI 300 slid as much as 7.2 percent, while the H-share index
slumped 5.9 percent. 
Share-price gains helped Chinese companies surpass many of their global
peers in market value last year. China is now home to six of the world's 25
largest companies by market value, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Only
PetroChina Co., the world's biggest company by market capitalization, is
among the top 25 in profit. 
Funds dedicated to investing in China saw net redemptions of $1.1 billion
for the week ended Jan. 23, the most in Asia, while India country funds had
outflows of $848 million, the Citigroup analysts said, citing data from EPFR
Global, a U.S.- based mutual funds research company. 
Investors withdrew a record $4.7 billion from Asian funds during the period,
the report said. 
Managers of Asian funds have also reduced their allocation to Hong Kong
stocks and increased investments in Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines,
according to the report. 
To contact the reporter on this story: Chua Kong Ho at in Shanghai or
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Last Updated: January 28, 2008 01:21 EST
 

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