The Borneo Post (Sabah)

China shares resume with modest losses, yuan firms despite trade slump

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SHANGHAI: Chinese shares fell more than 1 per cent yesterday as trading resumed after the Lunar New Year break and investors caught up with wild swings in global markets, while Beijing took another swipe at currency devaluatio­n talk with a strong fix for the yuan.

The Shanghai Composite Index was down 1.6 per cent after its first morning’s trade since Feb 5, while the CSI300 index of the largest listed companies in Shanghai and Shenzhen was down 1.4 per cent. The moves were relatively modest, given Japan’s Nikkei alone sank 11 per cent last week, though the Chinese indexes have had a more brutal 2016, losing about 22 per cent and 12 trillion yuan (US$1.84 trillion) in market value so far.

“Today’s investor sentiment in China is damped by last week’s global equity sell-off,” said Zeng Yan, strategist at Zhongtai Securities Co.

Zeng said the impact could be temporary, however, as last week’s global sell-off was mainly driven by falling commodity prices and concerns about the impact on European banks.

Brokerage Industrial Securities said in a report that Chinese shares could even post a modest rebound in February as fears of currency depreciati­on dissipated, which would in turn ease pressure on capital outflows and give the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) more room for monetary stimulus.

The PBOC fixed the yuan at its highest rate in over a month as it continued efforts to stem devaluatio­n speculatio­n .

Reflecting the recent retreat in the U.S. currency, the Monday fix of 6.5118 yuan per dollar, a reference point for trading, was much stronger than the 6.5314 set before the holiday, and the spot rate firmed to 6.5143.

The news provided a fillip to risk appetite across Asia and nudged the safehaven Japanese yen lower. — Reuters

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