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China’s $1.7 trillion hangover

China’s $1.7 trillion hangover

Up to 40% of China’s $1.7 trillion LGFV loans are at high risk of default. What’s a panicking Beijing to do?

June 2000

Issuers and buyers queue for IPOs


Retail enthusiasm for equities took off in Germany with Deutsche Telekom's first flotation. And despite tech-share volatility, individuals are also latching onto the growth-stock Neuer Markt. Legal changes and plans for a merger with London and trading links with Nasdaq look set to add to market vibrancy. Charles Piggott reports


    Go to fashionable bars in any major German city and you're likely to hear more heated talk about the stock market than about politics or sport. "It's got to the stage where it's become like the football results," says Christian Bacherl, a project manager in equity capital markets at HypoVereinsbank in Munich.

For the first time, queues of German retail investors seeking shares have formed in banks. And though reports that the whole country has caught the fever for US-style equity culture are perhaps exaggerated, there is solid evidence that the average German investor has overcome a prejudice against stock market investment. Ever since the first landmark Deutsche Telekom flotation four years ago, interest in stock ownership as a reasonable alternative to savings books and bonds has been mounting. Staid German investors once put equities in the same category as casino gambling - today...


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