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An investor watches market returns at a stock exchange hall on 27 July in Tai an, China.
An investor watches market returns at a stock exchange hall on 27 July in Tai an, China. Photograph: ChinaFotoPress/ChinaFotoPress via Getty Images
An investor watches market returns at a stock exchange hall on 27 July in Tai an, China. Photograph: ChinaFotoPress/ChinaFotoPress via Getty Images

China's stock market remains jittery after greatest losses since 2007

This article is more than 8 years old

Beijing vows to buy stocks to prop up stock market, regulator says, as shares slump then rise after Monday’s frenzied selling

Beijing has vowed to step up its interventions in China’s volatile stock market following a traumatic day on Monday when stocks suffered their greatest losses since 2007.

A government-controlled stock-buying agency would “continue to buy stocks to stabilise the market”, said Zhang Xiaojun, a spokesperson with China’s security’s regulator, the CSRC.

The regulator was also now investigating “huge stock sell-offs by some individuals and will punish any malicious short selling”, Zhang added, according to Xinhua, Beijing’s official news agency.

Asian stocks fell to three-week lows on Tuesday morning, as a deepening rout in Chinese stocks erased risk appetite – sending investors flocking to safe-haven instruments such as government bonds and the Japanese yen.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 0.8% in early deals, its lowest level since 9 July, as mainland Chinese indexes opened 2% to 5% lower.

Tokyo’s Nikkei fell more than 1%, with a strong yen accelerating the decline. Australian shares fell 0.9% and South Korea’s Kospi shed 1%.

Despite the government’s pledge to continue propping up the stock market, analysts warned those measures were not succeeding in boosting confidence.

Rajiv Biswas, the chief Asia economist for IHS Global Insight, said: “Some sort of correction had to happen and is happening and there is probably not a lot they can do to prevent a significant further drop.

“Even if they do announce monetary stimulus and fiscal stimulus measures, it is going to take some time before those really have any impact on the economy,” Biswas added.

“There are a lot of different parts of the economy that are showing weakness and the collapse of the stock market is just another symptom of the fragility of the Chinese economy right now.”

Following three weeks of relative calm, the Shanghai Composite Index plummeted on Monday, ending down 8.5% at 3725.56 – its worst fall since February 2007. Meanwhile the Shenzhen index dropped nearly 7.6% to close at 12493.05 points.

The latest day of frenzied selling – which analysts said reflected weaker economic data out of China as well as a lack of confidence in Beijing’s response to ongoing stock market chaos – was a slap in the face for the country’s Communist party leaders. Beijing launched an unprecedented push to prop up the country’s stock market after a collapse that began in mid-June saw more than $3tn wiped off the value of listed companies.

Until Monday, those efforts, which also included freezing IPOs, appeared to have brought some measure of stability.

Reuters contributed to this report.

More on this story

More on this story

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  • Shanghai investors keep calm amid the stock market storm

  • China stock market hit by biggest one-day fall since 2007

  • Chinese economy concerns wipe $40bn off value of Apple

  • China's biggest banks lend 1.3tn yuan in attempt to halt stock market meltdown

  • Big Mac index inflames debate over Chinese yuan's value

  • Why China’s stock market bubble was always bound to burst

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