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Retail investors have chased new shares on their first trading days since the mainland established its stock market in 1990. Photo: AP
Daniel Renin Shanghai

A buying craze in newly listed stocks may eventually crimp efforts by China’s securities regulators to deregulate the IPO system, say analysts and industry watchers.

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Investing in initial public offerings (IPO) can sometimes bring investors a 22-fold return in just 30 trading days as frenzied buying pushes up the stock prices.

Shares of Ningbo Haitian Precision Machinery soared to 34.29 yuan on December 21, up 2,186 per cent in 30 trading days after its debut on the Shanghai Stock Exchange on November 7.

The machinery maker floated 52.2 million shares in its IPO to raise 78.3 million yuan (HK$88.5 million) at 1.5 yuan apiece.

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Haitian’s shares retreated to 19.97 yuan on Thursday, 58.2 per cent off its peak on December 21.

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