Electrical utilities, oil & gas, and military industry took the lead in terms of increase, while semiconductors, real estate, brokerage, and media were at the forefront in terms of decline.
On Wednesday, October 23, the three major A-share indexes opened collectively lower, with the Shanghai Composite Index opening down by 0.02% and the Chinext Price Index falling by 0.64%.
The Hang Seng Index opened higher by 0.13%, while the Hang Seng Tech Index opened higher by 0.12%. This year, the second largest IPO in the Hong Kong stock market, China Resources Beverage, opened at 16.46 Hong Kong dollars on its first day of trading, up more than 13% from the issue price of 14.5 Hong Kong dollars.
Pop Mart surged 18% at the beginning of trading, with a total market value exceeding one hundred billion Hong Kong dollars. The company's third-quarter performance was impressive, with overall revenue increasing by 120%-125% year-on-year, and overseas business revenue soaring by 440%-445%.
The three major A-share indexes declined. As of the time of this report, the Shanghai Composite Index fell by 0.16%, the Shenzhen Component Index fell by 0.54%, the Chinext Price Index fell by 1.02%, and the SSE 50 Index rose by more than 1%. Electrical utilities, oil & gas, and military industry led the gains, while semiconductors, real estate, brokerage, and media led the declines.
During the morning session in the Hong Kong stock market, the Hang Seng Index rose by 0.35%, and the Hang Seng Tech Index rose by 0.66%. Gold, retail, and wind power led the gains, while banks, electrical utilities, real estate, and utilities lagged behind.
Government bond futures fell across the board. The 30-year main contract fell by 0.26%, the 10-year main contract fell by 0.08%, the 5-year main contract fell by 0.03%, and the 2-year main contract fell by 0.01%.
The following are the main trends in the A-share market:
[9:36 Update]
The wind power generation concept leads the way at the beginning of the trading day
Offshore wind power stocks surged over 10%, spic industry-finance holdings hit the daily limit,