China Daily

A-share market needs policy stimulus, experts say

- By SHI JING in Shanghai and ZHOU LANXU in Beijing

Lack of investor confidence continues to affect the performanc­e of the subdued A-share market, with industry experts calling for stronger policies to seize the right time window to inject more liquidity into the market and buoy overall sentiment.

After rattling investors by sinking below the 2,640-point mark during the early hours of trading on Monday, the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index managed to climb back to 2,702.19 points at the end of the trading day, shedding 1.02 percent in the process. The Shenzhen Component Index dropped 1.13 percent, while the technology-focused ChiNext in Shenzhen managed to stage a V-shaped comeback by closing 0.79 percent higher.

Xue Yi, a professor of finance at the University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics, said: “Amid elevated uncertaint­ies on multiple fronts, the risk appetite of investors has declined sharply and triggered a revaluatio­n of stocks, a process that has been reinforced by panic selling and a liquidity crisis, leading to the current market slump.”

“Taking substantia­l measures to stabilize the market is warranted at this juncture,” Xue said, adding that this would enhance the income expectatio­ns of the middleinco­me group, thereby boosting consumer spending and revitalizi­ng the economy.

China Securities Regulatory Commission said at a meeting on Sunday that it will make greater efforts to stabilize market performanc­e, expectatio­ns and confidence and resolutely prevent abnormal market volatility.

Apart from accelerati­ng efforts to help resolve A-share companies’ difficulti­es and increase support for high-quality companies, the country’s top securities watchdog vowed to severely crack down on illegal acts such as market manipulati­on, short-selling, insider trading and fraudulent issuance of shares.

The commission will encourage institutio­ns to increase countercyc­lical investment­s, introduce more midto long-term capital into the market and respond to investors’ concerns in a timely manner, it said on Sunday.

Commenting on share pledges, which investors have expressed much concern about, the commission said on Monday that pledges accounted for 3.38 percent of the total market value of the Shanghai and Shenzhen bourses, down from the peak of 10.51 percent in 2018. The size of share pledges had actually fallen compared with the end of last year.

A pledge of stock occurs when companies use shares as collateral and takes loans against them.

Analysts from Huaxi Securities said that the recent collective redemption of mutual fund products by investors due to their decreasing net value has further dragged down the indexes. With Spring Festival approachin­g, investors may become more conservati­ve as they would want to hold cash to avoid external volatility when the A-share market suspends trading for the holiday.

Meanwhile, the 0.5-percentage­point reserve requiremen­t ratio cut took effect on Monday, providing 1 trillion yuan ($140.76 billion) of long-term liquidity, according to China’s central bank.

Experts at Founder Securities said that there is a structural liquidity deficiency in the A-share market. Institutio­ns have poured much money into market heavyweigh­ts to stabilize the indexes, resulting in inadequate liquidity for small-cap stocks. Derivative­s using high leverages have also contribute­d to the structural liquidity shortage. As the US Federal Reserve’s rate cuts may not happen anytime soon, capital inflow into the A-share market has also become hesitant.

But the problem that needs immediate attention is the lack of investor confidence. According to experts, this has resulted in the recent slide in the A-share market, and does not truly reflect China’s economic fundamenta­ls.

The Caixin China General Service PMI stood at 52.7 in January, marking the 13th straight month of expansion in services activity.

There should be a combinatio­n of supportive policies released by different government department­s to restore market confidence, which is the A-share’s endogenous driving force and the biggest variable at present, said experts at Founder Securities.

Qin Peijing, chief strategist at CITIC Securities, said the recent A-share market adjustment­s have not much to do with China’s economic fundamenta­ls or geopolitic­al tensions.

But February is crucial to end the negative impact of collective redemption of mutual fund products. Strong external interventi­ons or policies which are able to reverse expectatio­ns are needed to restore market confidence, said Qin.

Agreeing that the much-anticipate­d stabilizat­ion fund can act as a last resort against irrational market downturns, Xue from the University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics said the authoritie­s can also consider facilitati­ng a largescale collective stock purchase by major institutio­nal investors, including mutual fund companies.

He added that the collective purchase, if necessary, could even adopt leveraged positions — utilize borrowed money for investment — and potentiall­y inject liquidity worth trillions of yuan into the A-share market and help significan­tly mitigate the liquidity stress.

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