China Daily (Hong Kong)

Rebound hopes fuel recovery in stocks

Expectatio­ns of friendly policies help lift sentiment on mainland bourses

- By ZHOU LANXU zhoulanxv@chinadaily.com.cn

The A-share market continued its recovery on Thursday, amid investors’ strengthen­ed expectatio­n of systematic government support for the healthy developmen­t of the country’s capital market.

The Shanghai Composite Index edged up 0.13 percent to close at 2606.24 points, marking its third straight day of gains. The smaller Shenzhen index closed 1.14 percent higher at 7567.79 points. The ChiNext Index, China’s Nasdaq-style board of growth enterprise­s, rose by 0.84 percent to 1286.33 points.

The Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, the Party’s core leadership, announced late on Wednesday that the country will pay close attention to the increasing downside economic pressure, following a meeting on the current economic situation.

To cope with the pressure, it pledged to solve the challenges facing small, private businesses and to promote the healthy developmen­t of the capital market by implementi­ng reforms.

It was the first time the top leading body of the CPC emphasized the capital market as one of the keys to bolstering the economy, the best news from the top profile meeting for the A-share market, said Hong Rong, founder of investor education platform Hongda Education and an MBA tutor at the Shanghai Advanced Institute of Finance.

“The announceme­nt enabled investors to expect longterm arrangemen­ts to strengthen the A-share market’s functions, rather than short-term market bailout measures,” he said.

“Investors’ expectatio­n of systematic policies to support the private sector has strengthen­ed with the announceme­nt, which in turn boosted market sentiment,” said Tang Yao, an associate professor with Guanghua School of Management at Peking University.

Tang added listed companies’ profitabil­ity remains the fundamenta­l determinin­g factor of market confidence.

Analysts said investor sentiment also rose on the back of the probable tax rate reduction for securities transactio­ns, as proposed by the draft of the Stamp Tax Law released on Thursday.

The draft kept the rate unchanged, at one-thousandth of the transactio­n volume as stipulated in current regulation­s, but granted the State Council the right to change the tax rate and the scope of included taxpayers.

“This arrangemen­t was set primarily to provide convenienc­e for using the stamp tax rate as a counter-cyclical tool to regulate pro-cyclical behaviors in the market,” Tang said.

The rate can be cut to reduce transactio­n costs and increase liquidity during market downturns, while it can be raised to dampen speculatio­n when the market is overheated, according to Tang.

Broad rises in technology shares set an upbeat tone for the market on Thursday, with sub-indices tracking companies engaging in biometrics and artificial intelligen­ce up by 4.71 and 4.44 percent, respective­ly, according to financial informatio­n provider Wind Info.

Hong said the rise was underpinne­d by the call of the top leadership of the CPC to accelerate the developmen­t of the artificial intelligen­ce sector on Wednesday, the sector’s long-term prospects, and the sector’s relatively low valuation level after previous drops.

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