China’s Stock Market Continues To Plummet

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China’s stock market continues to plummet, as the Shanghai Composite plunged 219.93 points on Wednesday. Experts have began questioning the effectiveness of the Chinese government’s plans to push through economic changes. 

The Shenzhen Composite Index dropped 2.5% (48.38 points), and other markets in Asia also fell as Hong Kong’s Seng index dived 8% before close and Japan’s Nikkei dropped 3.1%.

Usatoday.com reports:

 

The losses came despite government attempts to support the market, including increasing funding to securities firms to buy stocks and making it easier for insurers to buy blue chips.

The China Securities Regulatory Commission issued a statement encouraging major shareholders and senior executives to buy their companies’ shares when prices slump. “Investors’ panic and irrational sell-off caused a liquidity strain on the stock market,” CSRC spokesman Deng Ge said, according to state media.

Prior to the market’s recent plunge, which began in mid-June, the Chinese government was encouraging people both in and outside of the county to invest in its exchanges by saying they had become more stable. The wider plan was to use financial markets to sell off sizable stakes in big state-owned companies and reduce the government’s role in the economy.

Now such plans may have to be put on the shelf if the rout continues and state-owned enterprises, which are seen by the government as too big to fail, actually see their dominance increase.

Chinese brokerages that were planning to use funds to expand overseas have had to scrap those plans as they use their resources to prop up domestic markets. Twenty-one of China’s biggest brokerages have been pressed into service with a promise that they will spend 15% of their net assets to stem the “panic.”

This in turn caused their share prices to fall. Haitong Securities, China’s second largest broker, joined 1,280 other companies who requested trading suspensions after large drops. In total, 43% of so-called A-list shares were non-tradable Wednesday.

Not all companies performed poorly, however. State-owned PetroChina has actually seen its share price rise substantially as a result of the government directives.

Shares in small and medium-sized stocks, previously seen as good investments for China’s large number of mom-and-pop traders, have borne the main brunt of the slump.

In the past few months, more Chinese citizens have piled in to the market as it appeared to be on a permanent upward trajectory. Now those same people face their investments being wiped out.

Last week, a group of Shanghai senior citizens gathered at the stock exchange to sing the national anthem in a bid to “bring it back to health” and on Wednesday an elderly woman in Beijing threatened to commit suicide if a brokerage didn’t forgive the debts she has incurred through the market drop, the Beijing Youth Daily reported.

Shanghai stock market

Sean Adl-Tabatabai
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Having cut his teeth in the mainstream media, including stints at the BBC, Sean witnessed the corruption within the system and developed a burning desire to expose the secrets that protect the elite and allow them to continue waging war on humanity. Disturbed by the agenda of the elites and dissatisfied with the alternative media, Sean decided it was time to shake things up. Knight of Joseon (https://joseon.com)