China News Service, Hong Kong, June 18 (Reporter Shi Bingyun) Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index rose 242 points on the 18th to close at 28,801 points, an increase of 0.85%, and the main board turnover increased to 205.5 billion yuan (HK$, the same below).

The Hang Seng Index rose for two consecutive days, but still fell 41 points throughout the week.

  On that day, the three major indexes of Hong Kong stocks all rose.

Among them, the Hang Seng Technology Index rose 1.77%, Meituan and JD.com rose more than 3.5%, and NetEase rose nearly 2%.

And because Xiaomi was re-incorporated into the FTSE China 50 Index, it took effect after the market closed that day, and its turnover soared to 14.744 billion yuan, ranking first in the day's turnover. The closing stock price rose by 1.77%.

  Guo Sizhi, vice chairman of the Hong Kong Equity Analyst Association, pointed out that since the fund is closed at half a year at the end of this month and the foundation has a "whitewashing window" deployment, a number of new economic stocks may perform slightly better, such as Tencent, Meituan, Alibaba and Xiaomi, etc. If the heavyweight technology stocks perform well, the market is expected to regain 29,000 points.

However, he pointed out that the recent trading volume has continued to be low, and there is not much hope for a big rise for the time being.

  On the same day, the mainland tea brand Naixue's tea started a public offering and is expected to go public on June 30.

According to the prospectus, Nayuki's tea plans to sell about 257 million shares, with an offer price of 17.2 yuan to 19.8 yuan, and a maximum of about 5.1 billion yuan.

Zhang Zhiwei, co-director of Xincheng Securities, said that Naxue's tea is well-known, and the consumer domestic demand sector is highly sought after by the market, and the subscription response is expected to be overwhelming.

  On the same day, the accounting firm Deloitte China released an analysis of the mid-term performance and prospects of the Hong Kong IPO market in 2021. It is estimated that in the first half of 2021, Hong Kong’s IPO funds will be approximately 209.7 billion yuan, ranking third in the world.

Deloitte Accountants expects that 46 new stocks will be listed in Hong Kong in the first half of the year, a decrease of 22% year-on-year, but the amount of funds raised soared by 1.38 times.

Among them, Kuaishou is temporarily the world's largest new stock raised this year, involving 48.3 billion yuan.

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