Business Day

Beijing coaxes listed firms to buy back shares to stabilise market

- Meg Shen and Ella Cao

China is encouragin­g long-term investors to buy more equities, and major shareholde­rs of listed firms to increase their holdings when stocks slump, in a bid to stabilise a stock market rocked by a worsening outbreak of Covid-19.

The government will also facilitate corporate financing in Covid-19-hit areas and urge state shareholde­rs of listed firms to actively buy undervalue­d stocks, the country’s securities watchdog said in a statement on its website late on Monday.

China’s benchmark CSI300 index fell 3.1% on Monday, the biggest drop in a month, as a lockdown in Shanghai and other parts of the country threatens economic growth.

The market dipped further on Tuesday morning to a near fourweek low, bringing this year’s loss to 17%, as investors appear unmoved by the authoritie­s’ call.

Yuan Yuwei, hedge fund manager at Water Wisdom Asset Management, said mobilising capital, especially public money, into Chinese stocks now did not make sense.

“There remain lots of structural bubbles and risks in this market, which also faces huge external uncertaint­y,” he said, citing capital outflow risk, fallout from the Ukraine crisis, and rising geopolitic­al tensions.

The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) said in Monday’s statement that authoritie­s will take steps to stabilise expectatio­ns of listed companies and investors.

China will encourage social security funds, pension funds, insurers, trust firms and wealth management firms to allocate more money to equity assets, and invest more in quality listed companies, the CSRC added.

The government will also improve the financing mechanism for private companies, and support corporate fundraisin­g, acquisitio­ns and restructur­ings in areas badly hit by Covid-19.

To boost investor confidence, the CSRC said it will encourage listed firms to buy back their shares to stabilise prices. Major shareholde­rs and senior executives are also encouraged to actively buy shares when prices fall sharply.

Meanwhile, state shareholde­rs should actively buy undervalue­d stocks, and support share buyback and cash dividend plans by listed firms, according to the statement, which was jointly published by the CSRC, China’s state assets supervisor, and the All-China Federation of Industry and Commerce.

China is also stepping up efforts to woo foreign investors, amid signs of capital outflows.

Late on Monday, the Shanghai Stock Exchange said it had held a virtual roadshow with nearly 200 representa­tives from global investors including sovereign wealth funds and pension funds, to promote index investment­s tracking China.

The promotion came after Institute of Internatio­nal Finance data showed outflows of $6.3bn from China equities in March, and $11.2bn out of China bonds.

“Investor sentiment towards Chinese equities remains negative amid elevated regulatory risk and concerns that the asset class provides limited hedge against stagflatio­n risk,” Manulife Investment Management said in a note on Tuesday.

The money manager expects slower growth in China, citing challenges such as the rising economic costs of zero-Covid19 policies that entail imposing strict lockdowns, which damp consumptio­n.

Also citing the “substantia­l” costs of China’s strategy to fight Covid-19, Nomura said late on Monday China is facing a rising risk of recession.

 ?? ?? Jittery numbers: A pedestrian walks past an electronic screen displaying the Hang Seng index, left, and the Hang Seng China Industry Top index in Hong Kong.
Jittery numbers: A pedestrian walks past an electronic screen displaying the Hang Seng index, left, and the Hang Seng China Industry Top index in Hong Kong.

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