The Sunday Guardian

China Brokers to invest $19 mn to curB market plunge

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BEIJING: China’s 21 largest brokerage firms announced on Saturday that they would invest more than USD 19 billion in the country’s stock markets in order to curb its precipitou­s fall over the last three weeks. The brokers will spend at least 120 billion yuan (USD 19.3 billion) on so-called “blue chip” exchange traded funds (ETFs), the Securities Associatio­n of China said in a statement after an emergency meeting in Beijing. The group promised to act “firmly” to stabilise local markets, after a spate of official policy moves to stop the sell-off. The Shanghai stock market has plummeted by almost 30% over the past three weeks. On Friday, the Shanghai Composite Index closed down 5.77% to end at 3,686.92 points. Experts fear it could turn into a full-brown crash introducin­g even more uncertaint­y into global markets as Europe teeters on the edge of a potential exit by Greece from the eurozone. The USD 19 billion investment represents 15% of the brokerages’ combined net assets. The firms said they would not sell the stocks they held on 3 July and would continue to buy more as long as the benchmark index remains below 4,500 points. The move follows an announceme­nt by the market regulator yesterday to limit initial public offerings (IPOs) in an attempt to curb plunging share prices. IPOs in China disrupt the rest of the market as official restrictio­ns mean almost all of them go up 44% on their first day of dealings — so investors drain existing holdings to try to secure the near-guaranteed profits. The volatility is not linked to the ongoing crisis in Europe. Shanghai had swelled by 150% in the last 12 months and experts had expected a sharp correction.

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