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Wipeout: China stocks in US suffer biggest 2-day loss since 2008

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Beijing’s crackdown on its tech and education sectors has erased $769bn in value from US-listed Chinese stocks over the course of just five months.

The Nasdaq Golden Dragon China Index - which tracks 98 of China’s biggest firms listed in the US - plunged 7 percent Monday after regulators in China unveiled an overhaul of its education sector [File: Brendan McDermid/Reuters]

The Nasdaq Golden Dragon China Index - which tracks 98 of China’s biggest firms listed in the US - plunged 7 percent Monday after regulators in China unveiled an overhaul of its education sector [File: Brendan McDermid/Reuters]

By Matt TurnerBloomberg
26 Jul 2021

Beijing’s sweeping crackdowns of its technology and education sectors has unleashed shockwaves across global markets, erasing $769 billion in value from U.S.-listed Chinese stocks over the course of just five months.

The Nasdaq Golden Dragon China Index — which tracks 98 of China’s biggest firms listed in the U.S. — plunged 7% Monday after regulators in China unveiled an overhaul of its education sector which bans firms that teach school subjects from making profits, raising capital or going public. That adds to Friday’s 8.5% drop, bringing the gauge’s two-day decline to 15%, its biggest since 2008.

“The latest events arguably highlight that the authorities are more willing to upset investors in pursuit of their broader political goals now than they were a few years ago,” wrote Oliver Jones, senior markets economist at Capital Economics in a note to clients. “It is difficult to say precisely what will happen next on this front, but on balance it seems like the downside risks to equities have increased,” he said.

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Some large investors have already started to unload their shares. Cathie Wood’s flagship Ark Innovation ETF cut its holdings of China stocks to less than 0.5% this month from a high of 8% in February. The fund completely exited its position in tech-giant Baidu Inc. and has just 134 shares of Tencent Holdings Ltd. Its only other position, Chinese property site KE Holdings Inc., has dropped 60% so far this year.

TAL Education Group, New Oriental Education & Technology Group Inc. and Gaotu Techedu Inc., some of China’s largest education companies, all fell at least 26% each Monday, adding to their record declines from Friday.

 
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LOL.. This is good for China and bad for US. Thanks for posting such news and give DJ a glooming day! :enjoy:
Almost $800b less, that is more than double VN Gdp or stock market. Not a small number. I don’t know why it’s good.
 
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Almost $800b less, that is more than double VN Gdp or stock market. Not a small number. I don’t know why it’s good.
Good. They should list in China instead of the US and help develop the Chinese stock market.


See both the quote, viet. And understand why such a crash can be blessing for China stock market. If US stock market don't have tencent, Alibaba, BYD ,ehang and many other Chinese stock. They are as good as nothing.
 
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No this cannot be good no matter which way you look at it. But blame does not go to CPC fully. It turns out many chinese companies made money in a manner which will be illegal in usa. Like Alibaba forcing merchants to sell to them exlusively and not accepting other payment modes.

One thing i dont understand - CPC seems to understand the value of competition and fairplay. Then why not in politics ? why cant they have two parties sworn to uphold a constituion written whatever way CPC wants right now.
 
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No this cannot be good no matter which way you look at it. But blame does not go to CPC fully. It turns out many chinese companies made money in a manner which will be illegal in usa. Like Alibaba forcing merchants to sell to them exlusively and not accepting other payment modes.

One thing i dont understand - CPC seems to understand the value of competition and fairplay. Then why not in politics ? why cant they have two parties sworn to uphold a constituion written whatever way CPC wants right now.

There are plenty of competitions within the Chinese political structure as promotion are merit based. A duopoly however is one competition that's detrimental to the wellbeing of the state as there are plenty of examples in the nation's history.
 
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Basically a big F U to western markets.
Almost $800b less, that is more than double VN Gdp or stock market. Not a small number. I don’t know why it’s good.
More like a flex. China gov doesn't want foreign influence in its tech companies. This sell off will make stock buybacks a lot cheaper. As for these companies, they never lacked capital anyways.
 
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Tech stock in general are down after reaching peak around Feb- March. I personally stayed away from Chinese stocks because of risk posted by geopolitical Uncertainty. Despite everybody jumping on the Chinese EV training hoping for another Tesla.
 
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There are plenty of competitions within the Chinese political structure as promotion are merit based. A duopoly however is one competition that's detrimental to the wellbeing of the state as there are plenty of examples in the nation's history.

That competitors thing works until you reach the top echelons. After that what competition - with your enormous power to "reward" loyalty. Not very satisfactory answers, I am not saying two party is the best. But just logically exploring.
 
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That competitors thing works until you reach the top echelons. After that what competition - with your enormous power to "reward" loyalty. Not very satisfactory answers, I am not saying two party is the best. But just logically exploring.

Would anyone ever really know who are loyal and who are not? There will always be plenty of challengers even at the very top.
 
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LOL.. This is good for China and bad for US. Thanks for posting such news and give DJ a glooming day! :enjoy:

Chinese stocks losing value is good for US and bad for China
 
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