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Mixed reaction from investors for trading debuts in Hong Kong

Consumer goods company Casablanca gains 9 per cent on its debut but buyers lose appetite for property shares like CIFI which fell 1.5 per cent

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Shares of bedding maker Casablanca and mainland property firm CIFI headed in opposite directions on their Hong Kong debut yesterday, indicating fresh investor appetite for the domestic consumer sector at the expense of bubbly real estate.

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Shares of Casablanca soared more than 9 per cent to HK$1.64 on the first trading day, while the credit-strapped developer CIFI fell 1.5 per cent below its offer price of HK$1.33.

"The lacklustre Hong Kong debut of CIFI's offering highlighted investors' wariness over the property market in China, especially the small-sized developers that have been suffering from two years of property curbs and strapped credit conditions," a Hong Kong-based fund manager said after the market closed.

He said the credit crunch among small property firms is likely to persist due to slowing economic growth at home and less reliance on property and infrastructure development.

Jim O'Neill, the Goldman Sachs economist who coined the acronym BRIC for emerging powerhouses Brazil, Russia, India and China, said China would shift towards a domestic consumption-driven economy over the next five years.

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A person familiar with the Casablanca deal said jittery investors favour a simple business structure with realistic projected revenue.

Casablanca raised about HK$100 million and plans to use the bulk of it for expansion on the mainland. The company had wanted to raise about HK$300 million through a dual-currency listing in Hong Kong, but the plan received a tepid reaction.

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