Source:AFP Published: 2012-4-18 23:50:00
The Cambodia Securities Exchange (CSX) finally began trading shares Wednesday nine months after it officially opened, when a water monopoly became the first firm to list.
Trading symbolically started at 09:09 am local time (0209 GMT) - the number nine is considered lucky in Cambodia - and ended at noon. Normal trading hours will be from 08:00 am until 11:30 am.
Cambodia launched the bourse to great fanfare in July 2011, after numerous delays because of the global financial crisis and regulatory hurdles.
But no firms were ready to list on the market - a joint venture between the government and South Korea's stock exchange.
Now the Phnom Penh Water Supply Authority (PPWSA), which was formerly fully owned by the state, is floating 13 million shares, or 15 percent of the company, starting at 6,300 riel ($1.57) per share.
The state will continue to own the remaining 85 percent.
At the close on the first day of trading, shares had climbed by almost 50 percent to 9,300 riel ($2.32) each.
The firm's Initial Public Offering (IPO) last month was 17 times oversubscribed, an indicator of strong investor appetite for the long-awaited exchange, observers said.
Cambodian Finance Minister Keat Chhon hailed PPWSA's "historic" listing as "a big leap forward" for the impoverished country's economy.
"I would like to appeal to national and international investors to participate in securities trading, and provide their support to this young, but full-of-potential securities market," he said.
AFP