Bangkok Post

CSI 300 dives on bond rout

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SHANGHAI: Worries over a sustained bond sell-off in China bled into the country’s stock markets yesterday, dealing blue chips their worst one-day loss in nearly 18 months, as investors reacted to the government’s latest measures to reduce risks in the financial system.

The yield on Chinese 10-year treasury bonds touched a three-year high of 4.03% yesterday, traders said.

The unease comes as the government steps up its deleveragi­ng campaign, most recently with measures aimed at curtailing micro-lending and imposing tighter regulation on asset management businesses.

The blue-chip CSI 300 index tumbled nearly 3% to 4,103.73 points, its biggest drop since June 13, 2016, while the Shanghai Composite Index slid 2.3% to 3,352.99 in its worst day since December.

“For the short term, the biggest worry in the stock market is Beijing’s sweeping new rules to regulate the asset management business, which require financial institutio­ns to set leverage limits on asset management products,” said Yang Weixiao, an analyst with Founder Securities.

In some sectors such as health care and consumer products, analysts said the concerns provided a good opportunit­y for profit-taking after long run-ups.

The CSI index is still up 24% so far this year, while the SSEC is up 8%.

The sell-off in mainland China snowballed into Hong Kong, where the benchmark Hang Seng Index fell 0.99%, or 295.55 points, to close at 29,707.94 after soaring above the 30,000 level on Wednesday for the first time in a decade. the China Enterprise­s Index lost 1.9%, to 11,737.06 points.

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