By any
standard, the selloff in Chinese stocks over the past month has been epic.
Here’s a look at the turmoil by numbers.
As shares tumbled, companies rushed to apply
for trading suspension. More than 1,400 companies stopped trading on mainland
exchanges, locking sellers out of 50 percent of the market. The China
Securities Regulatory Commission also banned major shareholders, corporate
executives, and directors from selling stakes in listed companies for six
months.
Chinese stocks have become the most volatile
among major markets after Greece. A measure of 30-day price swings on the
Shanghai benchmark reached 56, the highest since 2008. The volatility is more
than five times that of the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index.
Investors who borrow money from brokerages
have amplified the boom-and-bust. A fivefold surge in margin debt had helped
propel the Shanghai index up more than 150 percent in the 12 months through
June 12. On the way down, leveraged investors unwound their holdings to repay
the loans, amplifying the crash. While margin debt on the exchanges has
declined by 823 billion yuan ($133 billion) since the mid-June peak, to 1.44
trillion yuan, it’s still more than triple the level from a year earlier.
Officials have unveiled market-boosting
measures almost every night in the past two weeks. A group of 21 brokerages has
pledged to invest at least 120 billion yuan in a stock market fund, taking a
page from the playbook used by J.P. Morgan and Guaranty Trust Co. during the
1929 U.S. crash. Regulators have banned major stockholders from selling stakes
in listed companies, suspended initial public offerings, and restricted short
selling.
While the efforts have helped boost the
largest stated-owned companies - oil giant PetroChina has gained 22 percent
since June 26 - they have so far failed to revive overseas investors’
confidence. Dual-listed Chinese stocks traded 33 percent lower in Hong Kong
than on the mainland, the biggest discount since 2009, suggesting investors
abroad are more pessimistic than the locals on the valuation of the companies.
Additional losses threaten to drag down
further the slowest economic growth since 1990 and stir social discontent. The
world’s second-largest equity market now has more than 90 million individual
investors, which is higher than the number of Communist Party members.
Πηγή: bloomberg.com
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