Chinese Government "Losing Control": Stocks Are Collapsing, Hitting New Bear Market Lows
Posted by George Freund on July 4, 2015 at 8:40 AM |
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/02/2015 22:02 -0400
As one local reporter put it, despite being told not to say anything negative, "the government appeared to have lost its ability to manage the market." Chinese stocks are down 4-5% at the open, pressing new cycle lows with Shenzhen and CHINEXT now down 25% from last week.
As The South China Morning Post reports, many investors said the government was at least partly to blame for the collapse because it encouraged them to go into the market - for months, state-owned media have issued daily commentaries to encourage people to load up on shares.
And now the payback: even more utter carnage:
The longer-term perspective:
Leading to the local version of "brokers with hands on their faces":
As The South China Morning Post explains, a series of lifelines from Beijing failed to stop the slide in the mainland's stock market on Thursday, with the key Shanghai Composite Index closing below the critical 4,000 mark for the first time in almost three months.
Analysts warned that the nation's leadership would pay dearly if it failed to stabilise the market and prevent millions of small investors from losing their life savings.
"The government's response to the fall confirms that it will use all the resources at its disposal to influence the market when things do not go the way it wants and potentially puts its legitimacy at risk," said Steve Tsang, chair of the School of Contemporary Chinese Studies at the University of Nottingham.
The China Securities Regulatory Commission said last night that the stock market had recorded a significant drop, and the commission would launch an investigation into suspected market manipulation. Those suspected of committing an offence would be handed over to public security agencies.
...
Since falling off a seven-year peak of 5,166.35 on June 12, the Shanghai index has lost about a quarter of its value, with the mainland equity markets heading into bear territory after fears of a tightening of margin lending induced a sharp correction.
Turnover in Shanghai dropped to 732 billion yuan (HK$926 billion) on Thursday, down from 1.015 trillion yuan on Wednesday. More than 1,400 mainland stocks finished down, with large state-owned banks and oil majors the big exceptions. Shanghai-traded PetroChina rose 8.8 per cent to 11.68 yuan, while Sinopec gained 6 per cent to 7.18 yuan.
All four big state-owned banks posted major gains as investors looked for safe havens.
"The deleveraging process in the stock markets and the over-the-counter platforms trading shares and futures is ongoing, leading to a big price movement regardless of Beijing's proactive monetary policies," said Ben Kwong Man-bun, the head of research at brokerage KGI Asia.
Those proactive policies included a fourth round of interest-rate cuts last weekend and the reduction in reserve requirements for some banks.
Many investors said the government was at least partly to blame for the collapse because it encouraged them to go into the market. For months, state-owned media have issued daily commentaries to encourage people to load up on shares.
Tsang said the government appeared to have lost its ability to manage the market.
"Will the government be able to change market sentiment if its initial interventions prove ineffective? Time will tell," he said.
The central bank said it would pursue a prudent monetary policy and keep the economy growing at a "healthy" rate.
And considering the HSBC Service PMI just plunged from 53.5 to 51.8, the lowest print of the year, that may be complicated especially if the government is truly helpless to halt the crashing stock market,
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-07-02/chinese-stocks-are-collapsing-again-hitting-new-bear-market-lows
In finance, a dead cat bounce is a small, brief recovery in the price of a declining stock. Derived from the idea that "even a dead cat will bounce if it falls from a great height", the phrase, which originated on Wall Street, is also popularly applied to any case where a subject experiences a brief resurgence during or following a severe decline.
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