Baby bump: China eatery in Japan soars on pregnant panda hopes

This handout from the Tokyo Zoological Park Society taken on May 22, 2017 and released on May 23, 2017 shows eleven-year-old giant panda Shin-Shin, who was brought to Ueno Zoo in Tokyo from China. Swelling hopes for a baby panda in Tokyo have bumped up the stock price of a Chinese restaurant chain in the area, with locals setting their sights on a flurry of tourists. Eleven-year-old Shin Shin has been showing signs of pregnancy since last week after mating with male Ri Ri in February 2017, according to zoo officials. / AFP PHOTO / TOKYO ZOOLOGICAL PARK SOCIETY / Handout / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / TOKYO ZOOLOGICAL PARK SOCIETY" - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS - NO ARCHIVES
This handout from the Tokyo Zoological Park Society taken on May 22, 2017 and released the day after shows eleven-year-old giant panda Shin-Shin, who was brought to Ueno Zoo in Tokyo from China. /AFP / Tokyo Zoological Park Society/

TOKYO, Japan (AFP) – Swelling hopes for a baby panda in Tokyo have bumped up the stock price of a Chinese restaurant chain in the area, with locals setting their sights on a flurry of tourists.

Eleven-year-old Shin Shin, who was brought to Ueno Zoo from China, has been showing signs of pregnancy since last week after mating with male Ri Ri in February, according to zoo officials.

Giant pandas are notoriously clumsy at mating, with males said to be bad at determining when a female is in the right frame of mind and often befuddled at knowing what to do next.

In the event the animals do feel compatible, the activity is frequently over too quickly to impregnate the female, who is only receptive to the proposition for two or three days a year between February and May.

But as hopes grow for a birth, stocks in local businesses in the Ueno area, and in particular Chinese restaurant chain Totenko, have jumped.

Totenko’s share price hit its daily limit at mid-day Tuesday after the zoo — Japan’s oldest — said it would halt viewing of Shin Shin on suspicion she may be pregnant.

Locals view a new baby panda as a huge draw for tourists, with retailers and souvenir shops expected to start selling panda-related goods.

The restaurant chain rose 7.02 percent to 198 yen ($1.78). Shares have now soared more than 16 percent since last week.

Seiyoken, another restaurant group specializing in Western cuisine and which also has its main outlet in Ueno, gained more than 7 percent at one point on Tuesday.

Shin Shin gave birth to a baby in 2012, the first at the zoo in 24 years, but the cub died from pneumonia six days later.

According to estimates, less than 2,000 giant pandas remain in the wild, in three provinces in south-central China.