China's biggest movie distributor has had a blockbuster opening week. Shares of China Film have more than doubled in their first week of trading, bringing the group's market value to nearly $5 billion. Never mind that ticket sales are falling across China. Artificially low prices and curbs on new issues mean that post-flotation performance is often divorced from fundamentals.
The state-controlled movie group premiered on the Shanghai stock exchange on August 9. Institutional and retail investors, respectively, placed orders of more than 2,500 and 1,300 times the shares on offer. Its shares soared the maximum 44 percent allowed right after an initial public offering. Since then, they have risen 10 percent a day, again the maximum possible increase.
That looks odd, at first. China Film's core distribution business is slowing while plans to push into movie-making and cinemas will pit it against powerful rivals like Dalian Wanda and Alibaba. Overall cinema ticket sales in China, having been puffed up by subsidies, are now falling for the first time in years.
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Meanwhile the CSRC has also kept prices low. New A-share listings are effectively capped at less than 23 times historic earnings. The comparison is not exact, but while China Film priced at 23 times earnings, Wanda Cinema Line, the country's biggest movie-theatre operator, trades on 64 times last year's earnings.
The artificially low prices force issuers to leave a lot of money on the table. That in turn guarantees dizzying IPO returns, which then attract even more investors. Shares of the 10 largest listings in the first half of this year have soared an average 260 percent, Breakingviews calculations show. Meanwhile, the benchmark CSI 300 index is down 8.5 per cent since the start of the year. China's IPO markets are badly disconnected from the real world. But this is unlikely to change as long as authorities insist on directing everything.