Off the wire
Bangladesh marks Independence Day  • China Focus: Mayors called in as environmental supervision shifts to local governments  • Foreign exchange rates in Hong Kong  • Ladies short program results at ISU figure skating worlds  • Li Zijun vows to skate to 2022 if Beijing wins Olympic bid  • Greek ferry carrying 282 runs aground off Aegean island  • China's cross-border capital net inflows up 38 pct: official  • China Voice: "Belt and Road" no tools of geopolitics  • Trading on Hong Kong Stock Exchange  • Pyongyang slams U.S. plan to deploy THAAD in S. Korea  
You are here:   Home

Roundup: HK stocks close 0.13 pct lower

Xinhua, March 26, 2015 Adjust font size:

Hong Kong stocks ended down 0. 13 percent on Thursday, with the benchmark Hang Seng index falling 31.15 points to end at 24,497.08 points, after trading between 24, 398.84 and 24,592.01.

Turnover totaled 83.21 billion HK dollars (about 10.72 billion U.S. dollars).

The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index fell 49.22 points, or 0. 41 percent, to close at 11,919.69.

Two sub-indices gained ground, with the Properties sub-index rising by 0.21 percent and the Utility 0.06 percent. The Commerce and Industry fell 0.21 percent while the Finance lost 0.16 percent.

Banking giant HSBC, which accounts for the largest weighting of the Hang Seng Index, closed flat at 67.35 HK dollars, while its local unit Hang Seng Bank fell 0.4 percent to 140.70 HK dollars. Local bourse operator HKEX decreased 0.8 percent at 178.30 HK dollars.

Local developers Hang Lung Properties fell 0.2 percent to 21.20 HK dollars. Henderson Land, another major developer in Hong Kong, declined 0.6 percent to 53.80 HK dollars, and Cheung Kong Holding, a powerful HK-based developer controlled by billionaire Li Ka- shing, went up 1.0 percent to 156.20 HK dollars.

As for mainland-based financial stocks, China Construction Bank, the country's second largest bank which accounts for the third largest weighting of the Hang Seng Index, added 0.2 percent to 6. 38 HK dollars. ICBC, the world's largest bank by market value, closed flat at 5.57 HK dollars. Bank of China lost 0.9 percent to 4.36 HK dollars.

PetroChina, the country's largest oil and gas producer, was up 0.8 percent to 8.35 HK dollars. (1 U.S. dollar equals 7.761 HK dollars) Endi