China Daily (Hong Kong)

US rate hike has ‘positive effect’

-

ter-than-expected employment figures and improved overall market sentiment.

“This is not just a sign of US recovery. It influences global market investors’ confidence positively,” said CITIC Securities Co in a research note.

“There won’t be concerns about capital flowing into the US market from China, because the fundamenta­ls in China, the world’s second-biggest economy, are also improving.”

Founder Securities Chief Economist Ren Zeping said in a research note that the hike pointed to stronger economic fundamenta­ls, and for China the spillover effect may include greater stability in the yuan-dollar exchange rate.

“Recovering fundamenta­ls, alongside growing domestic demand and global demand, will have a positive effect on the A-share market,” Ren said.

“The shares of companies which have been undervalue­d over the past few months present real opportunit­ies, as those prices are corrected to more rational levels.”

In the longer term, a stronger yuan and neutralize­d currency policies would also benefit yuan-denominate­d assets, including the A-share and bond markets, according to Qian Jun, a professor of finance at the Shanghai Advanced Institute of Finance.

Earnings from the bond market could increase, despite the fact that China’s bond market is already outperform­ing many other markets, as the bond market tracked fundamenta­ls more closely than ever, said a research note from Bosera Asset Management Co.

Zhou Wenyuan, a senior analyst at Guotai Jun’an Securities Co, said key factors influencin­g returns on the bond market were the CPI and PPI, and policy making in China’s domestic market.

“The Fed rate hike’s effect on China’s bond market will be mild and short-term, which is already reflected in the 15 basis points gain in Thursday trading,” he said.

A bond connect plan that links the bond markets of Hong Kong and the mainland, which is expected to be introduced by the end of 2017, will act as a bilateral investment flow mechanism that is significan­t for onshore investors, said Moody’s Associate Managing Director Ivan Chung.

The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index rose 0.85 percent on Thursday to 3,268.94 points, its highest level in three months, and 10-year treasury bond futures rose 0.7 percent to 96.355 points, a two-month high.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China