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As China’s Economic Picture Turns Uglier, Beijing Applies Airbrush

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BEIJING — This month, Chinese banking officials omitted currency data from closely watched economic reports.

Just weeks earlier, Chinese regulators fined a journalist $23,000 for reposting a message that said a big securities firm had told elite clients to sell stock.

Before that, officials pressed two companies to stop releasing early results from a survey of Chinese factories that often moved markets.

Chinese leaders are taking increasingly bold steps to stop rising pessimism about turbulent markets and the slowing of the country’s growth. As financial and economic troubles threaten to undermine confidence in the Communist Party, Beijing is tightening the flow of economic information and even criminalizing commentary that officials believe could hurt stocks or the currency.

The effort to control the economic narrative plays into a wide-reaching strategy by President Xi Jinping to solidify support at a time when doubts are swirling about his ability to manage the tumult. The government moved to bolster confidence on Saturday by ousting its top securities regulator, who had been widely accused of contributing to the stock market turmoil. Mr. Xi is also putting pressure on the Chinese media to focus on positive news that reflects well on the party.

But the tightly scripted story makes it ever more difficult to get information needed to gauge the extent of the country’s slowdown, analysts say. “Data disappears when it becomes negative,” said Anne Stevenson-Yang, co-founder of J Capital Research, which analyzes the Chinese economy.

The party’s attitude has raised further questions among executives and economists over whether Chinese policy makers know how to manage a quasi-market economy, the second-largest economy in the world, after that of the United States.

Economists have long cast some doubt on Chinese official figures, which show a huge economy that somehow manages to avoid the peaks and valleys that other countries regularly report. In recent years, China made efforts to improve that data by releasing more information more frequently, among other measures. It also gave its financial media greater freedom, even as censors kept a tight leash on political discourse.

But the party now sees reports of economic turbulence as a potential threat. The same goes for data.

“Many economic indicators are on a downward trend in China, and economic data has become quite sensitive nowadays,” said Yuan Gangming, a researcher at Tsinghua University’s Center for China in the World Economy.

The restrictions illustrate the Chinese government’s competing priorities, said Leland R. Miller, president of China Beige Book International, which surveys Chinese companies. “The environment is getting tougher and tougher to operate in,” he said, though he added that his company had not been told to rein in its activities.

“We are going to continue to see crackdowns on people telling a different story than what Beijing wants to hear,” Mr. Miller said. “At the same time, Beijing appears to be conflicted on this issue, because it recognizes that without independent gauges, commercial relations and foreign direct investment will suffer, due to growing skepticism over official data.”

Last September, Markit Economics, a British company, and Caixin Media, based in Beijing, stopped publishing preliminary results from a monthly survey of purchasing managers at Chinese factories. The preliminary results, which came a few days before the two firms and the government separately released complete numbers, often affected markets. As a result, officials at China’s statistics bureau objected to the early release, according to people with knowledge of the official order.

A spokeswoman for Markit declined to comment, while Caixin representatives did not respond to a request for comment.

“It’s a very influential economic indicator, and it’s highly cited overseas,” said Mr. Yuan, the researcher at Tsinghua. “Given the international worry over the Chinese economy, I had a sense last August that the Caixin indicator wouldn’t really last long, because its publishing in mainland China had touched high-tension lines.”

In January data released last week, the Chinese central bank omitted or hid one key number and altered the parameters of another that gave insight into what the central and commercial banks were doing to prop up the country’s currency.

Both sets of numbers, which show commercial banks’ foreign exchange purchase positions, appeared last year in the central bank’s monthly announcements. The central bank, the People’s Bank of China, did not answer a request for comment.

China’s central bank and national statistics bureau “are constantly changing, redefining, introducing and excluding statistics, and I don’t think it is by accident,” said Christopher Balding, an associate professor at Peking University HSBC Business School.

The National Bureau of Statistics did not return requests seeking comment.

Ms. Stevenson-Yang, of J Capital Research, said she and her colleagues had seen growing discrepancies in official data in the last two years in a variety of sectors, including retail, shipping and steel production. She said a colleague had once called a Chinese cement factory to ask for production data, and a factory employee had thought the researcher was calling from a government-affiliated research association. The employee told the researcher that the factory had already changed its numbers twice and would rather not do it again, so the researcher could choose any number that fit.

“When you go around and meet state-owned industry people, everybody laughs at the national statistics, so I don’t know why foreigners believe them,” Ms. Stevenson-Yang said.

Capital Economics, a London research firm, said in a recent report that problems with China’s statistical system “go beyond those found in an emerging economy. The biggest is that the G.D.P. growth rate is politically sensitive, which makes it more likely to suffer manipulation.” The firm does its own growth-rate estimate for China’s gross domestic product, which it put at 4.3 percent last year.

China’s online monitors have intensified their policing of chatter about markets. “The People’s Bank has gone crazy,” read one recent post that was later deleted, referring to the central bank. Another deleted post said: “One mistake after another. All assets are gone.”

Last June, Liu Qintao, a journalist for a newspaper in Shandong Province, posted in an online forum a message he had seen about Dongguan Securities, a Chinese brokerage firm. The post said Dongguan Securities had warned “V.I.P. investors” about coming risks and had urged them to sell.

The next day, Dongguan Securities said none of its employees had issued the warning. Chinese stock markets began crashing two weeks later.

On Jan. 8, more than six months after he posted the message, officials fined Mr. Liu $23,000 on a charge of having spread fabricated information. Mr. Liu said in an interview that he was being made a scapegoat and was appealing the fine.

“I didn’t fabricate the message,” he said. “Why would I do that? Who would make up things like that? All I did was copy and paste it.”

The China Securities Regulatory Commission did not respond to a request for comment.

Jon R. Carnes, founder of Eos Funds, a firm best known for bets that Chinese stock prices will fall, said China is in the midst of a down cycle in a long-running ebb and flow of public information. In 2012, a researcher for the fund, Kun Huang, was put in prison for two years for gathering information that led Eos Funds to bet against a Chinese mining company.

Last summer, Mr. Carnes said, China started to make it more difficult to gain access to online information about companies. “In general, over time, the trend has been positive and improving, but since last summer, we did see another step backward,” he said.

“I’m optimistic and feel over all that the long-term trend is still improving,” he added. “But this is an unfortunate setback.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/26/business/international/china-data-slowing-economy.html?_r=0
 
This is more about Philosophy instead of economic situation. Clearly China thinks that US is initiating a currency war. By Chinese philosophy, to win a war, you need to understand your enemy as clearly as possible and let yourself to be as murky as possible to your enemy.

Chinese economics is much better than that of US. Also you must understand that China is still a communist country with state planning and state enterprise. Communist countries only bankrupt under under-supply and never bankrupt for oversupply. For example, for the oversupply of steel and cements, China just uses them to build homes for villages for nearly free and also build SCS islands. As long as there are demands from poor people and security, it can work very well.

The supply and demand movement doesn't have to go through market economy. It can also work out by state planning as proved by Soviet Union and China. Soviet got broken because the supply side was broken due to falling oil prices. As long as China is having trade surplus, China has no problem at all. With the devalue yuan, instead Chinese trade surplus jumped.

Thanks to low international demand, more and more poor people in China are getting brand-new houses for nearly free. Roads and infrastructures are getting better and better in the countrysides. While the West claiming ghost cities in China, most of them simply disappeared just in two to three years since many are distributed to poor people relocated from poor villages deep in the mountains.

Only when you see trade deficit for China, you need to worry about Chinese economy. Otherwise, forgot about the Western media hype.
 
BEIJING — This month, Chinese banking officials omitted currency data from closely watched economic reports.

Just weeks earlier, Chinese regulators fined a journalist $23,000 for reposting a message that said a big securities firm had told elite clients to sell stock.

Before that, officials pressed two companies to stop releasing early results from a survey of Chinese factories that often moved markets.

Chinese leaders are taking increasingly bold steps to stop rising pessimism about turbulent markets and the slowing of the country’s growth. As financial and economic troubles threaten to undermine confidence in the Communist Party, Beijing is tightening the flow of economic information and even criminalizing commentary that officials believe could hurt stocks or the currency.

The effort to control the economic narrative plays into a wide-reaching strategy by President Xi Jinping to solidify support at a time when doubts are swirling about his ability to manage the tumult. The government moved to bolster confidence on Saturday by ousting its top securities regulator, who had been widely accused of contributing to the stock market turmoil. Mr. Xi is also putting pressure on the Chinese media to focus on positive news that reflects well on the party.

But the tightly scripted story makes it ever more difficult to get information needed to gauge the extent of the country’s slowdown, analysts say. “Data disappears when it becomes negative,” said Anne Stevenson-Yang, co-founder of J Capital Research, which analyzes the Chinese economy.

The party’s attitude has raised further questions among executives and economists over whether Chinese policy makers know how to manage a quasi-market economy, the second-largest economy in the world, after that of the United States.

Economists have long cast some doubt on Chinese official figures, which show a huge economy that somehow manages to avoid the peaks and valleys that other countries regularly report. In recent years, China made efforts to improve that data by releasing more information more frequently, among other measures. It also gave its financial media greater freedom, even as censors kept a tight leash on political discourse.

But the party now sees reports of economic turbulence as a potential threat. The same goes for data.

“Many economic indicators are on a downward trend in China, and economic data has become quite sensitive nowadays,” said Yuan Gangming, a researcher at Tsinghua University’s Center for China in the World Economy.

The restrictions illustrate the Chinese government’s competing priorities, said Leland R. Miller, president of China Beige Book International, which surveys Chinese companies. “The environment is getting tougher and tougher to operate in,” he said, though he added that his company had not been told to rein in its activities.

“We are going to continue to see crackdowns on people telling a different story than what Beijing wants to hear,” Mr. Miller said. “At the same time, Beijing appears to be conflicted on this issue, because it recognizes that without independent gauges, commercial relations and foreign direct investment will suffer, due to growing skepticism over official data.”

Last September, Markit Economics, a British company, and Caixin Media, based in Beijing, stopped publishing preliminary results from a monthly survey of purchasing managers at Chinese factories. The preliminary results, which came a few days before the two firms and the government separately released complete numbers, often affected markets. As a result, officials at China’s statistics bureau objected to the early release, according to people with knowledge of the official order.

A spokeswoman for Markit declined to comment, while Caixin representatives did not respond to a request for comment.

“It’s a very influential economic indicator, and it’s highly cited overseas,” said Mr. Yuan, the researcher at Tsinghua. “Given the international worry over the Chinese economy, I had a sense last August that the Caixin indicator wouldn’t really last long, because its publishing in mainland China had touched high-tension lines.”

In January data released last week, the Chinese central bank omitted or hid one key number and altered the parameters of another that gave insight into what the central and commercial banks were doing to prop up the country’s currency.

Both sets of numbers, which show commercial banks’ foreign exchange purchase positions, appeared last year in the central bank’s monthly announcements. The central bank, the People’s Bank of China, did not answer a request for comment.

China’s central bank and national statistics bureau “are constantly changing, redefining, introducing and excluding statistics, and I don’t think it is by accident,” said Christopher Balding, an associate professor at Peking University HSBC Business School.

The National Bureau of Statistics did not return requests seeking comment.

Ms. Stevenson-Yang, of J Capital Research, said she and her colleagues had seen growing discrepancies in official data in the last two years in a variety of sectors, including retail, shipping and steel production. She said a colleague had once called a Chinese cement factory to ask for production data, and a factory employee had thought the researcher was calling from a government-affiliated research association. The employee told the researcher that the factory had already changed its numbers twice and would rather not do it again, so the researcher could choose any number that fit.

“When you go around and meet state-owned industry people, everybody laughs at the national statistics, so I don’t know why foreigners believe them,” Ms. Stevenson-Yang said.

Capital Economics, a London research firm, said in a recent report that problems with China’s statistical system “go beyond those found in an emerging economy. The biggest is that the G.D.P. growth rate is politically sensitive, which makes it more likely to suffer manipulation.” The firm does its own growth-rate estimate for China’s gross domestic product, which it put at 4.3 percent last year.

China’s online monitors have intensified their policing of chatter about markets. “The People’s Bank has gone crazy,” read one recent post that was later deleted, referring to the central bank. Another deleted post said: “One mistake after another. All assets are gone.”

Last June, Liu Qintao, a journalist for a newspaper in Shandong Province, posted in an online forum a message he had seen about Dongguan Securities, a Chinese brokerage firm. The post said Dongguan Securities had warned “V.I.P. investors” about coming risks and had urged them to sell.

The next day, Dongguan Securities said none of its employees had issued the warning. Chinese stock markets began crashing two weeks later.

On Jan. 8, more than six months after he posted the message, officials fined Mr. Liu $23,000 on a charge of having spread fabricated information. Mr. Liu said in an interview that he was being made a scapegoat and was appealing the fine.

“I didn’t fabricate the message,” he said. “Why would I do that? Who would make up things like that? All I did was copy and paste it.”

The China Securities Regulatory Commission did not respond to a request for comment.

Jon R. Carnes, founder of Eos Funds, a firm best known for bets that Chinese stock prices will fall, said China is in the midst of a down cycle in a long-running ebb and flow of public information. In 2012, a researcher for the fund, Kun Huang, was put in prison for two years for gathering information that led Eos Funds to bet against a Chinese mining company.

Last summer, Mr. Carnes said, China started to make it more difficult to gain access to online information about companies. “In general, over time, the trend has been positive and improving, but since last summer, we did see another step backward,” he said.

“I’m optimistic and feel over all that the long-term trend is still improving,” he added. “But this is an unfortunate setback.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/26/business/international/china-data-slowing-economy.html?_r=0
CN economy will not collapse if TPP fail to start in 2018.....and US capitalist will face wt collapse instead.
 
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People relocated from poor villages are given free houses. This is not imaginable to the West. West media also try to ignore these because only Chinese companies can benefit from these.

20151203025448470.jpg


Eco-Migration in Guizhou

xin_10311061916230311364015.jpg

Eco-Migration in Tibet

Chinese economy is called socialism market economy, which is trying to optimize state planning and market economy. The department in charge of state planning is called Committee of State Planning. Its head used to be as powerful as the Premiere. Now this department is divided into two to collaborate better with market economy: National Development and Reform Commission and State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission of the State Council. Each one is still more powerful in economics than People's Bank of China.
 
People relocated from poor villages are given free houses. This is not imaginable to the West. West media also try to ignore these because only Chinese companies can benefit from these.

come to the NorthEast and you'll see tons of these oddly small little houses:
ar120016398115683.jpg

Built by the thousands after the war (~1950) and the cost to purchase it was almost nothing (heavily subsidized). That was the postwar gift to people.

Right now they are being torn down and bigger homes put in their place (including mine)
 
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State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission of the State Council.supervises assets of more than 100 trillions yuan, much more than Federal Reserve. This is what USA always complains because USA doesn't have a powerful economy manipulator as this. The most important mission of TPP is to kick out the manipulation by this one.

come to the NorthEast and you'll see tons of these oddly small little houses:
ar120016398115683.jpg

Built by the thousands after the war (~1950) and the cost was almost nothing. That was the postwar gift to people.

Right now they are being torn down and bigger homes put in their place (including mine)
That's when USA still believed in some socialism. In 1950-60s, USA also built a great national highway system. Not like now, a crazy maniac of free market economy. USA even cannot build a single mile of high speed railway. Some even want to kick out the Social Security system.

Free market economy makes unfair competition between the rich and the poor. The rich get richer while the poor become poorer as proved by USA during last 3 decades. There should be a strong government with socialism policies to balance this unfair competition. In 1930-60s, US government clearly worked hard on this and benefited USA for generations; but now, US government is powerless to do this.
 
Some even want to kick out the Social Security system.

Speaking of Social Security...when is China going to have it mandatory for all workers..and adjusted for inflation. In 2013 only 1/3 had it. With inflation older people are feeling the pinch to their savings. Somebody who retired with 100,000 yuan was a millionaire 10 years ago and now they are almost poor with inflation.
 
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Speaking of Social Security...when is China going to have it mandatory for all workers..and adjusted for inflation. In 2013 only 1/3 had it. With inflation older people are feeling the pinch to their savings.
Yes. This is something China need to work out very soon. But Chinese infrastructures in poor areas and countryside are not good enough. I think that China will focus more on infrastructure and then social security benefits. There are just tons of things to do in China. So OverSupply or OverProduction is never a problem to China. These will be the main drive of Chinese economy, instead of exports in the following years.

Therefore you should forget about the collapse of Chinese economy as long as there are oversupply and there are good demands with growth points. Only when Chinese infrastructure in the countryside are as good as those in USA, I will start to worry about Chinese economy.

Speaking of Social Security...when is China going to have it mandatory for all workers..and adjusted for inflation. In 2013 only 1/3 had it. With inflation older people are feeling the pinch to their savings. Somebody who retired with 100,000 yuan was a millionaire 10 years ago and now they are almost poor with inflation.
Chinese inflation is very low during last decade. Only the housing prices go to the sky due to the lack of property taxes. Many people simply hold property with nearly zero cost, which makes housing market with low liquidity. But still except those Tier 1 cities, the housing prices are not expensive. Housing bubbles in Tier 1 cities are a big trouble for China. But I think that China still has at least 5 years to sort this out since there are strong growth points elsewhere.
 
Speaking of Social Security...when is China going to have it mandatory for all workers..and adjusted for inflation. In 2013 only 1/3 had it. With inflation older people are feeling the pinch to their savings. Somebody who retired with 100,000 yuan was a millionaire 10 years ago and now they are almost poor with inflation.

I am not sure where you got this. It seems to me every worker in China will receive a retirement salary when they reach retirement age, it is usually 60-70% of their regular salary, and adjusted annually. Where do you think hose "dama" got their purchase power from? China government is now even extending this benefit to those who live abroad, and quit their job before their retirement. When my mom retired as an engineer at 55, she received about RMB 1500 a few years ago, now she is getting about RMB 4000 per month.
 
I am not sure where you got this. It seems to me every worker in China will receive a retirement salary when they reach retirement age, it is usually 60-70% of their regular salary, and adjusted annually. Where do you think hose "dama" got their purchase power from? China government is now even extending this benefit to those who live abroad, and quit their job before their retirement. When my mom retired as an engineer at 55, she received about RMB 1500 a few years ago, now she is getting about RMB 4000 per month.

China’s social security system | China Labour Bulletin
 

This is from a HK interest group, don't read too much into it. I only believe what I see with my own eye. Everyone I know of at retirement age is receiving a retirement wage. There are also plans to cover people live in rural area.

There is an interesting graph in the above link, there were 560 million city population who were covered with basic medical insurance, which is almost twice as many people as US population, and the year was 2013. No wonder Chinese people never need to think twice before they go to see doctors for just about anything.
 
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As China’s Economic Picture Turns Uglier, Beijing Applies Airbrush



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BEIJING — This month, Chinese banking officials omitted currency data from closely watched economic reports.

Weeks earlier, Chinese regulators fined a journalist $23,000 for reposting a message that said a big securities firm had told elite clients to sell stock.

Before that, officials pressed two companies to stop releasing early results from a survey of Chinese factories that often moved markets.

Chinese leaders are taking increasingly bold steps to stop rising pessimism about turbulent markets and the slowing of the country’s growth. As financial and economic troubles threaten to undermine confidence in the Communist Party, Beijing is tightening the flow of economic information and even criminalizing commentary that officials believe could hurt stocks or the currency.


The effort to control the economic narrative plays into a wide-reaching strategy by President Xi Jinping to solidify support at a time when doubts are swirling about his ability to manage the tumult. The persistence of that tumult was underscored on Thursday by a 6.4 percent drop in Chinese stocks, which are now down more than a fifth since the beginning of this year alone.

The government moved to bolster confidence on Saturday by ousting its top securities regulator, who had been widely accused of contributing to the stock market turmoil. Mr. Xi is also putting pressure on the Chinese media to focus on positive news that reflects well on the party.

But the tightly scripted story makes it ever more difficult to get information needed to gauge the extent of the country’s slowdown, analysts say. “Data disappears when it becomes negative,” said Anne Stevenson-Yang, co-founder of J Capital Research, which analyzes the Chinese economy.

The party’s attitude has raised further questions among executives and economists over whether Chinese policy makers know how to manage a quasi-market economy, the second-largest economy in the world, after that of the United States.

Economists have long cast some doubt on Chinese official figures, which show a huge economy that somehow manages to avoid the peaks and valleys that other countries regularly report. In recent years, China made efforts to improve that data by releasing more information more frequently, among other measures. It also gave its financial media greater freedom, even as censors kept a tight leash on political discourse.

But the party now sees reports of economic turbulence as a potential threat. The same goes for data.

“Many economic indicators are on a downward trend in China, and economic data has become quite sensitive nowadays,” said Yuan Gangming, a researcher at the Center for China in the World Economy at Tsinghua University.

The restrictions illustrate the Chinese government’s competing priorities, said Leland R. Miller, president of China Beige Book International, which surveys Chinese companies. “The environment is getting tougher and tougher to operate in,” he said, though he added that his company had not been told to rein in its activities.

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“We are going to continue to see crackdowns on people telling a different story than what Beijing wants to hear,” Mr. Miller said. “At the same time, Beijing appears to be conflicted on this issue, because it recognizes that without independent gauges, commercial relations and foreign direct investment will suffer, due to growing skepticism over official data.”

Last September, Markit Economics, a British company, and Caixin Media, based in Beijing, stopped publishing preliminary results from a monthly survey of purchasing managers at Chinese factories. The preliminary results, which came a few days before the two firms and the government separately released complete numbers, often affected markets. As a result, officials at China’s statistics bureau objected to the early release, according to people with knowledge of the official order.

A spokeswoman for Markit declined to comment, while Caixin representatives did not respond to a request for comment.

“It’s a very influential economic indicator, and it’s highly cited overseas,” said Mr. Yuan, the researcher at Tsinghua. “Given the international worry over the Chinese economy, I had a sense last August that the Caixin indicator wouldn’t really last long, because its publishing in mainland China had touched high-tension lines.”

In January data released last week, the Chinese central bank omitted or hidone key number and altered the parameters of another that gave insightinto what the central and commercial banks were doing to prop up the country’s currency.

Both sets of numbers, which show commercial banks’ foreign exchange purchase positions, appeared last year in the central bank’s monthly announcements. The central bank, the People’s Bank of China, did not answer a request for comment.

China’s central bank and national statistics bureau “are constantly changing, redefining, introducing and excluding statistics, and I don’t think it is by accident,” said Christopher Balding, an associate professor at Peking University HSBC Business School.

The National Bureau of Statistics did not return requests seeking comment.

Ms. Stevenson-Yang, of J Capital Research, said she and her colleagues had seen growing discrepancies in official data in the last two years in a variety of sectors, including retail, shipping and steel production. She said a colleague had once called a Chinese cement factory to ask for production data, and a factory employee had thought the researcher was calling from a government-affiliated research association. The employee told the researcher that the factory had already changed its numbers twice and would rather not do it again, so the researcher could choose any number that fit.

“When you go around and meet state-owned industry people, everybody laughs at the national statistics, so I don’t know why foreigners believe them,” Ms. Stevenson-Yang said.

Capital Economics, a London research firm, said in a recent report that problems with China’s statistical system “go beyond those found in an emerging economy. The biggest is that the G.D.P. growth rate is politically sensitive, which makes it more likely to suffer manipulation.” The firm does its own growth-rate estimate for China’s gross domestic product, which it put at 4.3 percent last year.

China’s online monitors have intensified their policing of chatter about markets. “The People’s Bank has gone crazy,” read one recent post that was later deleted, referring to the central bank. Another deleted post said: “One mistake after another. All assets are gone.”

Last June, Liu Qintao, a journalist for a newspaper in Shandong Province, posted in an online forum a message he had seen about Dongguan Securities, a Chinese brokerage firm. The post said Dongguan Securities had warned “V.I.P. investors” about coming risks and had urged them to sell.

The next day, Dongguan Securities said none of its employees had issued the warning. Chinese stock markets began crashing two weeks later.

On Jan. 8, more than six months after he posted the message, officials fined Mr. Liu $23,000 on a charge of having spread fabricated information. Mr. Liu said in an interview that he was being made a scapegoat and was appealing the fine.

“I didn’t fabricate the message,” he said. “Why would I do that? Who would make up things like that? All I did was copy and paste it.”

The China Securities Regulatory Commission did not respond to a request for comment.

Jon R. Carnes, founder of Eos Funds, a firm best known for bets that Chinese stock prices will fall, said China is in the midst of a down cycle in a long-running ebb and flow of public information. In 2012, a researcher for the fund, Kun Huang, was put in prison for two years for gathering information that led Eos Funds to bet against a Chinese mining company.

Last summer, Mr. Carnes said, China started to make it more difficult to gain access to online information about companies. “In general, over time, the trend has been positive and improving, but since last summer, we did see another step backward,” he said.

“I’m optimistic and feel over all that the long-term trend is still improving,” he added. “But this is an unfortunate setback.”



 
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