The Herald (Zimbabwe)

China stocks fall as trade war escalates

- By Samuel Shen and John Ruwitch

SHANGHAI. — Chinese stocks fell on Friday as US tariffs reignited fears of a global trade war, overshadow­ing the long-awaited inclusion of A-shares in MSCI Inc’s benchmark indexes which had been expected to trigger a surge of cash from foreign investors.

The addition was upstaged overnight after the US slapped tariffs on metal imports from major allies and several quickly retaliated, days ahead of a third round of trade talks between Washington and Beijing which were already looking rocky.

While fund managers’ strategies are hard to predict, many analysts had forecast inflows of $10 billion around the inclusion. But tepid interest on Thursday had hinted at a subdued initial reaction in the world’s second-largest equity market by capitalisa­tion.

The Shanghai Composite Index started out flat but ended the day down 0,7 percent, while the benchmark CSI300 dropped 0,8 percent.

In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng China Enterprise­s Index, which tracks mainland shares, bounced between negative and positive territory to end the day up 0,4 percent. Hong Kong’s blue-chip index was little changed.

“There was a lot of media hype around the MSCI inclusion. Now it’s history,” said Wu Kan, head of equity trading at Shanshan Finance.

“Foreign institutio­nal investors are very rational. They won’t just rush into China hot-headed,” he said, adding there were lingering concerns over creditwort­hiness of some China-listed companies, as well as Sino-U S trade relations.

Dealers said major global passive fund managers had already completed portfolio rebalancin­g on Thursday to avoid any deviations from the global benchmarks starting on Friday, robbing the market of some MSCI opening day momentum.

About a net $1 billion worth of funds flowed into mainland markets via the Hong Kong stock “connect” scheme on Thursday. On Friday, net northbound flows fell to about $355 million.

Some active funds have also been gradually raising their investment in Chinese shares over the past two months, anticipati­ng an MSCI-related bounce in prices from June 1 and taking advantage of a drop in valuations. The SSEC has pulled back about 14 percent from its late January highs.

Opening to the world

On Friday, MSCI added 226 yuan-denominate­d mainland A-shares to its emerging markets index for the first time in a step toward deeper integratio­n of China’s bourses with the rest of the world.

China’s securities regulator said it would use the inclusion as an opportunit­y to improve rules governing foreign investment in Chinese stocks.

Property shares were strong, while infrastruc­ture shares slipped and banking stocks ended flat.

Lynda Zhou, portfolio manager of Fidelity Internatio­nal, said China’s recent crackdown on shadow banking benefits banking stocks by improving visibility of lenders’ assets.

She also prefers leading Chinese consumer companies, which will benefit from rising consumptio­n, improving corporate efficiency and opportunit­ies in internatio­nal markets.

The Chinese shares added to MSCI’s emerging markets benchmark have a 2,5 percent partial inclusion factor. The second phase of the inclusion will take place on Sept. 3, raising the factor to 5 percent.— Reuters.

 ??  ?? A Chinese investor monitors stock prices at a securities firm
A Chinese investor monitors stock prices at a securities firm

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