China should shut down its stock market for about 1 year until it becomes a proper stock market. This is not a stock market. 90% are old people pretending to be investors.
Chinese stock market has become a national embarrassment. Every few weeks this thing crashes like 20% in 1 week. Then goes up again 15% the next week. Then crashes again. It's worse than a casino.
Shameful. The regulators should be arrested for their incompetence.
People say Chinese stock market is not representative of the real economy but when it crashes every few weeks it further damages China's economic and financial reputation and shows the regulators have absolutely no idea what the hell they are doing. People won't even buy the renminbi as Chinese financial markets are incredibly volatile.
3% movement is considered massive.
I agree with you on this one. Chinese stock market is surprisingly one of the few field in which China still lags far behind other developed(and even some developing) countries.
It's like the the wild wild west version of the stock market.
In the US/U.K and other advanced western countries, the stock market is quite mature, both in terms of the mechanisms built into the market (shorting, options, circuit breakers, futures, indices and rebalancing) as well as the experience of the key participants (hedge funds, institutional funds, pension funds, and retail investors etc).
In contrast, the Chinese market is quite young(so we need to give China time as well.). Much of the mechanisms in western markets do not yet exist or are very limited in the Chinese market (retail investors don't have access to options, shorting is limited to those with 1/2 Million already invested in the market). More importantly, many Chinese citizens don't seem to understand the market or even have basic impressions of the inherent risks in the market.
Now add to that a government that is eager to inject value into the market (perhaps to boost the value and balance sheets of state-owned companies as my friend
@Economic superpower pointed out earlier). The market was basically stuck in neutral for a number of years, but moves to increase economic growth by improving liquidity and easing borrowing woke the market up. In addition, steps taken to open the market to international investors (first via links to HongKong) provided a huge catalyst.
However, Suddenly, the market was moving up, and folks who had no idea what stocks were were racing to open new accounts(i red in FT that over 30 millions account were opened from April to July last year alone).
Funny thing is, People were/are not only betting their lives savings, but selling physical assets and borrowing money to put into the market.
something like borrowing 10x your actual portfolio value to trade. The more injection of new yuan/dollar, the higher the market goes. Since much of the market is now dominated by inexperienced investors, there's little attention paid to fundamental valuation metrics, and P/E ratios for some small caps went as high as 1300.
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It is for such reasons that the Chinese stock market is generally far more volatile than most others as it is a market driven by pouring money instead of the inherent value recognition, which makes it is like a Ponzi's Scheme most of the time. As the stock rally is completely depended on the new money invested by new investors, without money pouring in, the bubble is destined to burst soon or later.
Granted that forced liquidation via margin calls is a common contributor to most corrections/crashes in the US/western markets as well, but the difference is that those margin calls are often triggered by hedge funds who made big bets the wrong way, not individual investors as in China.
Anyway, Chinese stock market is more detached from the Chinese economy, so any crash wont have a serious effect/impact on China's economy per se, unlike in western countries whose stick market is closely linked to the economy. Nevertheless it does tarnishes the image of China's stock market as economic superpower said earlier. and we all know that its difficult to gain back trust/recognition in this case since perception matters alot(more than even reality at times).lol