China shares fall again as Beijing scrambles to calm markets


(MENAFN- The Peninsula) Chinese shares fell yestertday, as Beijing scrambled once again to prop up a stock market whose wild gyrations have heightened fears about the financial stability of the world's second biggest economy.

After a plunge of more than 8 percent in major indexes on Monday, Chinese regulators said yesterday they were investigating share "dumping" incidents.

Earlier the China Securities and Regulatory Commission (CSRC) had said it was prepared to buy shares to stabilise the stock market, while the central bank injected cash into money markets and hinted at further monetary easing. Despite those moves, aimed at bolstering the confidence of the ordinary investors who dominate China's equity markets, the Shanghai Composite Index fell 1.7 percent, while the CSI300 index of the largest listed companies in Shanghai and Shenzhen dipped 0.2 percent.

A highly volatile day - not unusual in China's unruly stock markets - had seen both indexes lurching between losses as deep as 5 percent and gains of more than 1 percent. "Retail investors' confidence in the mainland market is very weak," said Steven Leung, a director from UOB Kay Hian in Hong Kong.

Monday's dramatic slide shattered three weeks of relative calm for Chinese equities, secured through heavy government intervention in which authorities pumped liquidity into the market while effectively barring many investors from selling.

The rapid sell-off, which saw China's major indexes suffer their biggest one-day loss in more than eight years, may have been partly due to authorities testing the water for withdrawing some of that heavy-handed support.

Three people in the banking industry with direct knowledge said that the state-run margin lender had returned ahead of schedule some of the funds it borrowed from commercial banks to stabilise the stock market.

"The authorities picked an inopportune time to float a trial balloon about scaling back market support operations," wrote Tim Condon, head of research Asia for ING Bank in Singapore, in a note yesterday. "Lesson learned: sentiment manifestly remains fragile."

The wild volatility in China's markets has stoked fears among global investors about the broader health of the Chinese economy, and sent Asian investors scurrying for safe-haven assets such as government bonds and the Japanese yen. While economists at Nomura said China's economy was "far from being in a crisis scenario", they said shaken investors could cut back on spending and investment, which could impede a broader recovery that had been expected in the second half of the year.

Market watchers also fear that some companies may be facing heavy losses after speculating in stocks, although the overall amount of leverage is hard to quantify. Still, Nomura said the sell-off "should only have a limited negative impact on the real economy". But the renewed turbulence has raised questions about the long-term viability of Beijing's strategy of intervening to control its markets. "Monday's plunge showed the Chinese authorities that even governmental measures have their limits," said Bernard Aw, market strategist at IG in Singapore. "It's anybody's guess what else they can do to shore up market sentiments.

Despite a slowing economy, China's main stock indexes had more than doubled over the year to mid-June, when a sudden swoon that wiped out as much as $4 trillion in stock market capitalisation in a matter of weeks.

Markets finally began stabilising in the second week of July after a barrage of official support measures. China's central bank cut interest rates, brokerages formed stabilisation funds and regulators lifted restrictions on pensions and insurers investing in stocks.


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