Montreal Gazette

China cracks down on stock practices after market crash

- JOE MCDONALD

Authoritie­s accused securities firms of manipulati­ng stock prices during China’s market plunge and launched a crackdown Monday against unlicensed companies that financed speculativ­e trading.

The moves appeared to be aimed at deflecting blame from the ruling Communist Party for trillions of dollars in investor losses as China’s market benchmark plummeted 30 per cent over the past month.

They came as drastic official efforts over the past two weeks including a ban on sales by executives and big shareholde­rs appeared to at least temporaril­y stop the decline that wiped out $3.8 trillion in investor wealth.

On Monday, the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index closed up 2.4 per cent for its third straight daily gain but still was 23 per cent below its June 12 peak.

Investigat­ors have found “evidence to suspect that individual trading companies are illegally manipulati­ng securities and futures exchanges,” the police ministry said late Sunday. Its one-sentence statement said a criminal investi- gation was underway but gave no details of which firms were targeted.

On Monday, the securities regulator ordered brokerages to sever ties with unlicensed companies that lend money to finance trading.

The regulator also accused brokerages of improperly allowing customers to trade without giving their real names or to subdivide accounts to allow others to use them to trade.

The stock market boom began last year after the state press said shares were cheap, which led investors to believe Beijing would intervene to prop up prices if needed. The collapse came after changes in banking regulation­s made inves- tors suspect Beijing might withdraw its support. Regulators also tightened controls on lending to finance trading.

Novice investors who rushed into the market near the peak have suffered heavy losses, souring sentiment toward stock investment.

The price collapse could frustrate Communist Party plans to encourage the public to buy stocks and to raise money for state companies to pay off debts and become more competitiv­e.

More than 1,000 of the 2,802 companies traded on the mainland’s exchanges in Shanghai and Shenzhen also have suspended trading in their shares following the plunge in prices. That has left small investors locked into shares that some are under pressure to sell to repay loans.

“It remains to be seen how the market holds up once all the artificial impediment­s to selling are withdrawn,” said Carl B. Weinberg of High Frequency Economics in a report.

Official media have blamed the market slide on short-selling, rumours and misconduct, possibly by foreign investors.

On Monday, the securities regulator ordered brokerages to sever ties with unlicensed companies it said were providing loans to finance trading and were given access to customers in violation of regulation­s.

That was “to the detriment of the legitimate rights and interests of investors, seriously disrupting the stock market order,” the statement said.

 ?? NG HAN GUAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Chinese stock investor uses a magnifying glass to look at his mobile phone screen as he monitors stock prices. Chinese stocks are down more than 20 per cent from their June peak.
NG HAN GUAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Chinese stock investor uses a magnifying glass to look at his mobile phone screen as he monitors stock prices. Chinese stocks are down more than 20 per cent from their June peak.

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