China Daily (Hong Kong)

Sentiment stays subdued on bourses

- By LI XIANG lixiang@chinadaily.com.cn

The sudden drop of some stocks sparked caution in the A-share market on Friday, with analysts saying China’s financial tightening will curb speculativ­e trading and continue to exert pressure on prices among smaller-cap stocks.

The CSI 300 Index, which tracks the top 300 stocks traded on the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges, slumped by 3 percent on Thursday, the biggest loss since June 2016. A total of 200 listed companies saw their share price tumble by the 10 percent daily trading limit.

While the market recovered some of the loss on Friday, with the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index rebounding by 0.44 percent, investors’ sentiment remained fragile, especially toward companies with trust or asset management products as their top shareholde­rs.

Equity analysts said that the sudden market drop could be caused by investors share dumping, as they worry that the government’s financial deleveragi­ng efforts could lead to forced liquidatio­n of some trust and asset management products.

“The speculativ­e mood has been dampened by strengthen­ing regulation. The deleveragi­ng efforts and high valuations could lead to a sell-off of some expensive small-cap stocks,” according to Chen Jiahe, chief strategist at Cinda Securities Co.

China’s securities and banking regulators have asked trust companies to reduce trading leverage and have suspended some of their structured securities investment, Chinese media reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

The move was part of the country’s ongoing push to regulate its rapidly growing asset and wealth management sector, which involves many obscure investment products with complex structures and high trading leverage.

Some financial institutio­ns have begun to clean up their risky business by selling or liquidatin­g matured investment products in compliance with the tightened regulation, which could be one of the reasons triggering the market fall, analysts said.

“Some trusts and asset management products are maturing and they cannot roll over due to China’s deleveragi­ng measures, so the only solution is to dump shares,” Wang Chen, a Shanghai-based partner at XuFunds Investment Management Co, was quoted by Bloomberg as saying.

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