The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

It’s a long way down for China stocks channellin­g past traumas

- By RICHARD FROST, SOFIA HORTA E COSTA and LU WANG

THREE years after China’s equity bubble burst, the country’s investors are once again reeling from losses.

More than US$3 trillion has been wiped out since January, all of France’s stock market capitalisa­tion and then some, as Chinese shares tumble the most in the world.

Private companies are struggling with liquidity concerns, the economic outlook is slowing as a trade war with the US deepens, and a weakening yuan is starting to prompt capital outflows.

History suggests it’s not over. While the Shanghai Composite Index is now down 28% since this year’s high, the gauge almost halved as the 2015 boom turned to bust.

“The time when the the market is going to turn around has to be reasonably soon, but I don’t think anybody knows exactly when,” said Don Gimbel, senior vice-president at CIBC Private Wealth Management, which oversees more than US$50bil.

“It’s been unnerving because my portfolio performanc­e has suffered dramatical­ly after the selloff. I’ve been at this a long time and I tell my clients, ‘these are the times we have to live through to come out to the other side’.”

Shanghai equities are now trading at levels last seen in November 2014. Stocks in China’s tech hub of Shenzhen have fared even worse amid mounting concern about margin calls. And companies listed offshore haven’t been spared the rout, with tech giants Tencent Holdings Ltd and Alibaba Group Holding Ltd slumping in Hong Kong and New York.

The Shanghai Composite Index climbed 2.6% yesterday after sliding as much as 1.5% in the morning.

The heads of China’s central bank, banking and insurance regulator, and securities regulator all issued statements yesterday voicing their support for the market and promising measures to help ease financial pressures on companies, especially those with a high proportion of pledged shares.

The Hang Seng Index rose 0.4% as of 3:49pm in Hong Kong after dropping as much as 1.4%.

The drop in the Shanghai gauge from its peak is the biggest among 94 global benchmarks tracked by

Bloomberg, including Greece and Argentina. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index isn’t far behind, with a 23% retreat.

The Chinese benchmark is also growing more volatile, registerin­g at least three declines of more than 2.5% since markets resumed trading on Oct 8 after National Day holidays.

Selling pressure is increasing. Almost 60% of the roughly 1,500 members on the gauge had a relative strength of less than 30 on Wednesday.

Last week, two thirds of the members had fallen to one-year lows, the highest proportion since 2011.

One more positive sign: turnover remains low, suggesting a lack of panic.

“We’re a lot closer to the bottom than the top,” said CIBC’s Gimbel, who likes infrastruc­ture and tech shares. Still, “there is an old saying on Wall Street, don’t try catch the falling knife, and I think that’s probably appropriat­e – why try to be a hero?”

 ??  ?? Market gain: Investors looks at an electronic board showing stock informatio­n at a brokerage house in Shanghai. The Shanghai Composite Index climbed 2.6% yesterday after sliding as much as 1.5% in the morning.
Market gain: Investors looks at an electronic board showing stock informatio­n at a brokerage house in Shanghai. The Shanghai Composite Index climbed 2.6% yesterday after sliding as much as 1.5% in the morning.

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