China's stock market plunges for the fourth straight day
http://www.vox.com/2015/8/23/9195891/china-stock-market-crash
Javier
Zarracina / Vox.com
- China's benchmark Shanghai Composite Index is down 4.4 percent in Tuesday trading.
- The market has lost 19 percent of its value in four straight days of losses. It's down 40 percent from its June peak.
- Over the past two months, the Chinese government has taken extreme measures to reverse the stock market's decline — but these measures now appear to be failing.
China's stock market had a debt-fueled boom, followed by a crash
Between
June 2014 and June 2015, China's Shanghai Composite index rose by 150
percent. A big reason for the stock market rally was that a lot of
ordinary Chinese people began investing in the stock market for the
first time. More than 40
million new stock accounts were opened between June 2014 and
May 2015.
And
many have been buying stocks with borrowed money. The Chinese
government used to strictly limit this practice, but over the past
five years the government has gradually relaxed those regulations.
Earlier
this year, the authorities became concerned that the stock market's
rise had become unsustainable. So they began to tighten limits on
debt-financed stock market speculation. The stock market peaked in
June and then began to fall quickly.
Efforts to prop up the market haven't worked
By
early July, the market was in free fall, and the Chinese government
began to panic. Authorities took
a number of steps to push stock prices back up:
- The central bank provided more cash to the China Securities Finance Corp, a state-run company that lends people money so they can buy stocks.
- Initial public offerings were suspended, so that newly issued shares wouldn't compete for capital with those already on the market.
- Companies' major shareholders — those with more than 5 percent of a company's shares, as well as executives and board members — were banned from selling shares for six months.
- China's securities regulator ordered companies to either buy their own shares or encourage their executives or employees to do the same.
Those
efforts seemed to work for a few weeks. The Shanghai Composite rose
from the July 8 low of 3,507 and seemed more stable. But that proved
to be a temporary reprieve. Last week, the market began to plunge
again.
Once
again, China tried to prop up the stock market, announcing that
a major state pension fund will be allowed to invest in stocks for
the first time. But the market was unimpressed with the announcement.
According
to the Financial Times, the Chinese authorities finally concluded
this weekthat propping up the stock market would be too
expensive. The government spent more than $200 billion buying Chinese
stocks since early July, and faced the prospect of continuing to
spend at that rate indefinitely to keep the market from crashing.
No
government likes to see its stock market crash, but the plunging
Shanghai Composite will be particularly embarrassing for the Chinese
authorities. Positive coverage from state-run media helped fuel last
year's stock market boom, and last month's decision to intervene in
the stock market tied the government's prestige even more tightly to
the market's performance.
The Chinese economy is struggling
The
broader Chinese economy isn't doing very well either. Official
figures show the Chinese economy growing at a 7 percent rate in the
second quarter. That's slow by Chinese standards, and many Western
economists suggest that the official figures overstate China's
growth.
Weak
Chinese growth has exerted downward pressure on China's currency. The
Chinese central bank allowed the currency to fall
by 3 percent earlier this month.
For
the past two decades, China has benefited from an export-oriented
growth strategy. But exports can't power China's growth forever —
world markets just aren't big enough. So China needs to transition to
an economy that's powered more by domestic consumption. And as Vox's
Max Fisher has written,
the economic reforms required to facilitate that won't be easy.
From the Guardian
Asian stock markets recover with big swings after Wall Street slump – live
Chinese Stocks Are Crashing; Yuan Devalues, Deposit Rate Spikes To Record High, Japan Denies "G7 Response" Planned
Zero Hedge,
24 August, 2015
Following yesterday's bloodbath (and the continued carnage around the world), AsiaPac stocks are lower with Japan unable to mount any sustained bounce despite every effort to lift JPY. The propaganda-fest is in full swing as Amari claims JPY is safe-haven asset and Aso denies any coordinated G7 response is being planned (which means they are all feverishly trying to figure out how to 'save' the world again from a 4-day stock drop). China is ugly with stocks down hard in the pre-open (CSI-300 -4.3%) as offshoreYuan depo rates spike to 22.9% - a record high - as liquidity outflows must be accelerating (as PBOC adds another CBNY150bn liquidity). China devalues Yuan 0.2% - most in 11 days.
Carnage
-
- *CHINA SHANGHAI COMPOSITE SET TO OPEN DOWN 6.4% TO 3,004.13
- *CHINA'S CSI 300 INDEX SET TO OPEN DOWN 6.3% TO 3,070.01
This
is the 5th day of crashing Chinese stocks in a row...
Chinese
Stocks are down 14% since Friday!!
Year-to-date,
Shangahi is now down 6.2% and CSI-300 (China's S&P) is down a
stunning 15%!
Where
China will stop (or atleast aim for) - when
QE-Lite (PSL) was unleashed...
The
Japanese are in full propaganda mode...
- *SUGA: WATCHING MARKET MOVES ATTENTIVELY
- *ASO: FX MOVES HAVE BEEN ROUGH ("rough" - well that's one word for complete and utter carnage)
- *ASO: CONTINUING TO CLOSELY WATCH MARKET MOVES
- *ASO: I HAVEN'T CONTACTED U.S. TREASURY (which means he has!)
- *ASO: NOT AT STAGE FOR G-7, G-20 RESPONSE (which means there is)
- *AMARI: UP TO BOJ TO DECIDE ON ADDL EASING (how's that last QQE2 working out?)
- *AMARI: YEN IS BEING BOUGHT AS SAFE ASSET (nope it's a forced carry unwind sorry!)
- *AMARI:YEN SEEN AS SAFE ASSET SHOWS VALUATION OF JAPAN ECONOMY (what utter crap!)
So
we await the coordinated response to the global vicious circle of
carry unwinds and forced liquidations... but remember, RRR cuts so
far have done absolutely nothing to hold back wave after wave of
frenzied malicious Chinese sellers just wanting out of the ponzi.
The
talk is not working as Chinese stocks are weak in the pre-open...
- *FTSE CHINA A50 SEPT. FUTURES DROP 3.4% IN SINGAPORE
- *CHINA CSI 300 STOCK-INDEX FUTURES FALL 4.3%
Some
good news... China is deleveraging...
- *SHANGHAI MARGIN DEBT DECLINES TO LOWEST IN FIVE MONTHS
As
China devalues Yuan by most in 11 days..
- *PBOC WEAKENS YUAN FIXING BY 0.2%, MOST SINCE AUG. 13
- *CHINA SETS YUAN REFERENCE RATE AT 6.3987 AGAINST U.S. DOLLAR
And
China adds yet more liquidity...
- *PBOC TO INJECT 150B YUAN WITH 7-DAY REVERSE REPOS: TRADER
The
desperation to keep liquidity from flooding out is very evident:
- *ONE-WEEK OFFSHORE YUAN DEPOSIT RATE JUMPS 840 BPS TO 22.9%
- *YUAN DEPOSIT RATE HEADED FOR RECORD CLOSE IN HONG KONG
"Some
are converting yuan back into USD or HKD amid the devaluation,’’ says
Lawrence Kung, head of deposits department at Wing Lung Bank in Hong
Kong
*
* *
Hope
continues for a huge broad-based RRR cut but The PBOC - just as it
said - remains fixed on small targeted liquidity injections. This
will not please the 'people' or Jim Cramer... "they know
nothing."
*
* *
And
finally, we could not have put it better than The
Onion as
they explain how the "Shoddy
Chinese-Made Stock Market Collapses"...
Proving to be just as flimsy and precarious as many observers had previously warned, the Chinese-made Shanghai Composite index completely collapsed Monday, sources confirmed.
“Sure, it looked fine from the outside, but anybody who saw it up close knew that it was of such poor quality that it wasn’t built to last,” said Allen Sigman of the London School of Economics, adding that the stock market, which he described as a crude knockoff of Western versions, was practically slapped together overnight and featured countless obvious structural weak points.
“They pretty much ignored regulations, and inspections were a joke. The only surprise is that it didn’t fall apart sooner.” Sigman added that he just hopes there weren’t too many people who were hurt in the disaster.
*
* *
We
assume that is satire... though it does seem a little too real.
Coming To America? China Censors Bad Market Talk Amid Meltdown
Zero Hedge,
24 August, 2015
Back in July, after a dramatic unwind in the half dozen or so backdoor margin lending channels that had helped drive Chinese stocks to nosebleed levels triggered a terrifying 30% decline (vaporizing billions in paper profits in the process), the Politburo predictably stepped in to rescue the market.
However,
when it started to become clear that a succession of declarations,
directives, policy rate cuts, and even threats weren’t going to be
enough to alleviate the pressure on equities, Beijing
looked to take back the narrative by banning the use of certain
undesirable phrases.
Here’s
what happened (as detailed in "China
Bans Use Of Terms 'Equity Disaster' And 'Rescue The Market'"):
Although it’s not possible to know exactly what the mood is among Party officials in China regarding the inexorable slide in stock prices that’s unfolded over the course of the last three weeks, it’s reasonable to assume that at least some officials in Beijing are in the throes of Politburo panic after watching some $3 trillion in market value disappear into thin (and probably polluted) air.
Amid the turmoil, China has resorted to an eye-watering array of policy maneuvers, pronouncements, and plunge protection schemes aimed at arresting the slide.
Nothing has worked.
Not suspending compulsory liquidation for unmet margin calls, not billions in committed market support from brokerages, not a PBoC backstop for the CFSC, and not even a ban on selling by the Social Security Council.
And so, with every attempt to manipulate the market higher falling flat in the face of selling pressure from the hairdresser/ farmer/ banana vendor day trading crowd (which has now thrown in the towel on the whole “it’s easier than farm work” theory and now just wants to break even and head for the hills) the only thing left for China to do is “fix” the narrative.
In other words, when banning selling doesn’t work, the logical next step is to ban talking about selling. As FT reports, one domestic journalist, who did not want to be named, said the government had banned local media from using the terms 'equity disaster' and 'rescue the market' in their reports on the stock market."
Given
the above it shouldn't come as a surprise that after Chinese stocks
collapsed overnight, Beijing has reportedly banned discussion and
forbade "negative market reports."
BREAKING: Chinese authorities issued notice to state media to censor negative market reports following #BlackMondaypic.twitter.com/hQ6vbksYtw
— George Chen (@george_chen) August 24, 2015
So
with the censorship machine in high gear, Xi Jinping had better hope
that Beijing can at least still exert some control over the narrative
because as we saw over the weekend when angry
investors captured the
head of Fanya Metals Exchange, and as is clear from the outcry
surrounding the chemical blast in Tianjin, the public is restless,
and the collapse of the stock market might just be the catalyst for
social upheaval.
Down-Under, in Australia and New Zealand the punters are pretty confident that there is no crisis and this is 'just a correction'. They can't help themselves and invest in bargainŠ¹s like there's no tomorrow (which there isn't)
NZ shares pull out of China nose-dive
New
Zealand share prices pulled out of a China-inspired nosedive today,
assisted by a degree of stability returning to the Australian market,
and as bargain hunters moved in to take advantage of improved value
throughout the region.
By
2.30 pm the local market, which earlier had fallen by 2.4 per cent on
the S&P/NZX50 Index, had levelled out, to be just 9 points down
at 5,598.
Australia's
All Ordinaries Index, after a sharp fall on Monday, gained 2.2 per
cent, Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index was up 2.5 per cent, Taiwan's TAIEX
index was up 2.3 per cent and Japan's Nikkei 225 was level.
ASX rallies as bargain hunters jump in
Australian
investors are enjoying an unlikely bounce on Tuesday, with the local
index at first plunging beneath 5000 for the first time in two years
before powering through a strong comeback during the morning.
Even
a sharp drop in Chinese markets when they opened failed to dent the
rally in local shares.
How will China's woes affect NZ?
China's
volatile sharemarket plunged yesterday, causing financial turmoil
around the globe, but what does it mean for the New Zealand economy?
25
August, 2015
The
mainland benchmark index, the Shanghai Composite, closed
down 8.5 percent yesterday -
after large losses last week. Over the past week, the index fell 12
percent, adding up to a 30 percent drop since the middle of June,
leading to a sharp fall in currencies and commodities around the
world.
The
most immediate effect of China's woes could be seen on trading floors
around the globe, with falls inevitable when the brakes go on the
world's second largest economy. The Dow Jones in the US closed nearly
4 percent lower overnight, while the UK's FTSE 100 was down 5 percent
- its biggest weekly loss this year.
In
Australia, the ASX 200 suffered its worst
one-day fall in four years,
shedding 4.1 percent and wiping $A64 billion from the market.
New
Zealand is not immune to these kinds of global moves, with the NZX 50
down 2.5 percent yesterday, and further falls occuring when it opened
this morning. But the country is also better placed to ride out the
storm than many of China's other big trading partners.
Mark
Lister, the head of private wealth research at Craigs Investment
Partners, said New Zealand was not as affected by oil and commodity
prices, which are at the centre of the stock market fall overseas.
He
told Morning Report today that long-term investors,
including those in Kiwisaver, could even take advantage of the fall.
"For
people who are investing with a 20-30 year view, or even a 10-year
view, they should actually look forward to periods like this. When
you're investing in Kiwisaver every payday, you actually want these
periods of weakness so you can do your buying while there is panic in
the market, and while everything looks heap."
Prime
Minister John Key also reassured Kiwis today, saying that New Zealand
was well placed to withstand any pressures that may arise from the
Chinese volatility.
He
said there was a difference between what was happening in China on
the construction and investment side, and the consumer demand side.
"Our
exporters are much more heavily focused on the consumer demand side,
selling food and a number of other products to them.
"Australia's
economy, for instance, is much more heavily focused on the investment
side, so it's arguably a bigger deal for Australia than New Zealand."
A course correction
Many
economists see the current falls in the chinese markets as a
correction, after months of rapid growth in the markets. Duke
University economist and business professor Campbell Harvey told Nine
to Noon today that even with a 8.5 percent dip, it would
need to drop another 30 percent to get to the same level it was at
this time last year.
He
expected further corrections to come, and also pointed out that China
has massive money reserves, totalling trillions of dollars, giving it
"plenty of firepower" to deal with crisis.
Listen
to Professor Campbell Harvey on Nine to Noon ( 20 min 2 sec )
Last
month, BNZ senior economist, Craig Ebert said the Chinese equity
market had been on a "ballistic move" since the start of
the year.
"I
think it just got so much of a head of steam it [Chinese officials]
just had to step in and say enough is enough and put in some policy
measures to nip it in the bud."
He
said the fact that the Chinese stock market essentially doubled in
the first few months of this year, while the Chinese economy
demonstrably slowed down showed "disengagement" between the
equity market and the general economy.
Longer term outlook
New
Zealand's two-way trade with China, worth $20 billion, and the
longer-term outlook for New Zealand if China continues to struggle is
still reasonably optimistic.
It's
true, China is the biggest foreign player in New Zealand's dairy
sector, and is the second biggest overall investor in New Zealand
with 14
percent of all overseas investment in 2013-2014.
The
New Zealand dollar is also particularly vulnerable to Chinese
fluctuations - after China devalued its currency earlier this
month, the
New Zealand dollar dropped -
and the latest volatility saw the Kiwi touch 62.44 US cents
overnight, its lowest level since July 2009.
The
Chinese devaluation also made it harder for our exporters to sell
into China.
However,
Professor Harvey said while he expected further "carnage"
in the markets today, New Zealand's exposure to China's volatility
had both good and bad outcomes.
"For
imports, it is New Zealand's most important trading partner, but as
China devalues, the imports become cheaper."
And
he said the type of exports New zealand sent to China were the ones
that were least likely to be affected by the turmoil.
"China
has to eat, and eating habits are not as volatile as the demand for
copper or iron ore for industry, so it means you're more protected.
"And
if you really think about it, one of the primary imports is
petroleum, and that price is plunging, that's also a good thing for
New Zealand."
And
the director of a Chinese research centre in this country said the
volatility of China's economy could drive more of its investors to
spend up in New Zealand.
New
Zealand Contemporary China Research Institute director Bo Zhiyue said
investors may find the Chinese market to be too volatile at this
time.
"They
may want to find a new outlet for their investment and their capital,
and I think Australia and New Zealand are perfect targets."
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