A leap in the shares of Industrial & Commercial Bank of China on Monday made it the world's biggest bank by market capitalization, overtaking U.S. giant Citigroup.
ICBC's Shanghai-listed A shares surged 2.68 percent to 5.75 yuan (US$0.76), giving it a market capitalization of US$254 billion, according to Reuters calculations.
That exceeded the US$251 billion capitalization of Citigroup, previously the world's biggest bank, when its shares closed at US$50.73 in New York on Friday. HSBC Holdings was in third place with US$215 billion.
Shares in ICBC, which listed in Shanghai and Hong Kong last October, have gained 15 percent this month on the back of a rally in China's booming stock market as well as strong growth in the bank's own earnings.
Weakness in Citigroup's share price, and appreciation of the yuan against the dollar have also shifted market values in favor of ICBC.
But some analysts believe ICBC's ballooning capitalization may also be a sign of a dangerously overheated Shanghai stock market as speculating Chinese investors pour money into shares.
ICBC, a State-owned behemoth which is trying to modernize a creaky branch network operating almost entirely inside China, reported income of US$24 billion last year.
Citigroup, one of the world's most sophisticated financial institutions with operations around the globe, reported income almost four times as large, at US$90 billion.
ICBC¨s share price Monday valued it at 28 times analysts' forecasts for its earnings per share in 2007, far above 11 times for Citigroup and an average of 16 times for major global banks, according to Reuters Estimates. (SD-Agencies)