The Chinese
government has been DESPERATELY trying to rescue and revive her vulnerable stock market market.
This I call the Xi
Jinping Put.
But unlike the relatively more
“moderate” interventions or PUTs implemented by the other developed economy peers,
the Xi Put includes several draconian capital controls and price controls
measures. Pls read the list here.
And the Xi
government’s panic to save her stock markets looks increasingly more like the
accounts of the early Middle Age King Gnut or popularly
known as King Canute in dealing with political power. According to historical
accounts, King Canute famously ordered
sea waves to stop. The King wanted to show his sycophants the limits of his
power. To the contrary, the Chinese version has been designed to exhibit the
dominance of politics over markets. In short, the modern day version would fit what the great Austrian economist F. A. Hayek
called as the 'fatal conceit'
So for three
days the political ‘spell’ seemed to have worked. However, such magic seem to be fading
as selling pressures have resurfaced.
Today’s 3% loss by the Shanghai Composite
has been compounded by yesterday’s 1.16% drop.
From the Bloomberg:
China’s stocks fell for a
second day after better-than-expected economic data failed to boost investor
confidence in the world’s worst-performing equity market over the past month. The
Shanghai Composite Index slid 3 percent to 3,805.70 at the close, paring
earlier declines of 4.7 percent as the nation’s largest companies climbed. With 701 stocks halted on mainland
exchanges and at least another 1,240 falling by the 10 percent daily limit,
sellers were locked out of about 67 percent of the Chinese market. The
two-day losses pared the gauge’s rebound from its July 8 low to 8.5 percent.
(bold mine)
Why the
difference between the muted losses of the indices relative to the broad market performance?
As tweet of
the South China Morning Post Editor George Chen reveals, the government and her networks pumped up
the index heavyweights, while this reduced index losses, such actions failed to
prevent a broad based meltdown
The broad based
carnage can be seen in the above, as most indices suffered 3%+ losses.
Curiously the
government’s announcement of improved
economic numbers: 2q 7% GDP, June’s 10.6% growth in retail sales 6.8%
growth in industrial production and 11.4% growth in fixed asset investment
failed to stop today's rout.
Will today's session lead to the second leg of China's stock market crisis?
I previously
shown how the Bloomberg compared the Chinese stock market crash to the Wall Street Collapse during the Great Depression.
Fathom
Consulting at the Thomson
Reuter’s Alpha Now says that Chinese stocks resemble the bursting dotcom bubble.
Whether 1929 or 2000 the outcome of the crash has been a recession. Will the same hold true for China?
Morgan Stanley says that China's next export to the world will be recession. I believe it will be more than a recession, it will be a crisis.
I wonder what
the Chinese government will do next? Will they announce an open ended buying on stocks by
the PBOC? Or will they just close stock market?
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