by winston » Thu Aug 13, 2009 6:47 am
Robust turnover boosts HKEx but earnings slide Katherine Ng, The Standard HK
Higher stock market turnover in the second quarter helped Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (0388) earn HK$2.2 billion in the first half - a 20 percent drop from last year.
Second-quarter net profit rose 3 percent from a year ago to HK$1.37 billion and was a 63.8 percent improvement from HK$834 million in the first three months of 2009. The bourse operator will pay an interim dividend of HK$1.84 per share, 26 percent lower than the HK$2.49 a year earlier. However, the payout ratio was kept at 90 percent.
Chief executive Paul Chow Man-yiu said if turnover in coming months remains at April-to-June levels, second-half earnings could surpass that of the first six months.
The second-quarter results were roughly in line with market estimates of HK$1.3 billion.
Daily average turnover in the first half was about HK$58.3 billion.
Chow said market turnover is key to results as 60 percent of revenue of HKEx, the largest listed exchange in the world by market capitalization, is related to it. "The only variables would be interest rates and the size of the corporate fund [an investment run by HKEx], which affect net interest income."
He said after stocks slumped in the first quarter, market sentiment improved and initial public offerings revived. To facilitate listing applications, HKEx will simplify application procedures and listing requirements.
It will accept financial statements audited by mainland firms and possibly remove the HK$50 million three-year profit threshold, he said.
Listing activity in the first half was slim with only 18 IPO candidates, 70 percent of them from the mainland.
Chow sees no immediate chance of H shares listing in Shenzhen as the yuan is not freely convertible. During the first half, the callable bull/bear contracts sector was the only one that rose, totaling 3,685 transactions, up 287 percent from same period last year.
The valuation of the Hong Kong market fell 13.5 percent to HK$14.15 billion from HK$16.35 billion last year. The stock dropped 3.88 percent to HK$146 yesterday.
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"