GiantPanda
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Chinese stocks losing value is good for US and bad for China
Then why did China go after those companies?
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Chinese stocks losing value is good for US and bad for China
Then why did China go after those companies?
China unveiled an overhaul of its education sector
Ok from the losses it is a bloodbath.Because they are mainly owned by foreign capital. They are the ones that suffer.
They are supposed to say that......the CPC is angry.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.
Yes because these chinese listed companies report to foreigners, they transfer the earnings to foreigners, they don’t stand under the control of Ccp. Bad luck, as such they are seen as public enemy. Chinese are on the nationalistic drive.They are supposed to say that......the CPC is angry.
Thanks for sharing our pain for your enemy China's long term goodness.Please ignore the smokescreen articles/rants posted in this thread that this is only related to Chinese stocks in US stock markets or targeting foreign investors in Chinese companies...
Chinese stocks are now among Asia's worst-performing as Beijing crackdown spooks investors
Days of heavy selling in Chinese stocks have left two major indexes in the country as the worst-performing markets of Asia-Pacific.www.cnbc.com
- The CSI 300 which tracks the biggest mainland China stocks, along with Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index, are currently among the worst-performing in Asia-Pacific.
- Separately, the MSCI Emerging Markets index has also tumbled into negative territory for the year. Chinese internet giants like Tencent, Alibaba and Meituan are among the top 5 constituents of the index, as of Jun 30.
- The declines come as Chinese regulators continue to step up their oversight in sectors spanning from technology to education and food-delivery.
Days of heavy selling in Chinese stocks have left two major indexes in the country as the worst-performing markets of Asia-Pacific.
At the close of regional markets on Tuesday, the CSI 300 — which tracks the largest stocks listed in mainland China — had plunged 8.83% so far this year. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index also suffered heavy losses, falling 7.88% in the same period.
“There hasn’t been a single two-day decline (for the Hang Seng index) since the Financial Crisis that has exceeded the magnitude of the last two days,” analysts at Bespoke Investment Group wrote in a note.
Other major mainland indexes such as the Shanghai composite and Shenzhen component were also in negative territory for the year, among the few major Asia-Pacific markets that lost ground year-to-date.
Separately, the MSCI Emerging Markets index has also tumbled into negative territory for the year. Chinese internet giants such as Tencent, Alibaba and Meituan were among the top 5 constituents of the index, as of Jun 30.
The declines come as Chinese regulators continue to step up their oversight in sectors spanning from technology to education and food-delivery. The increased scrutiny spooked investors and sent many scrambling for the exit.
Hong Kong and China markets traded mixed in Wednesday morning trade, struggling to recover from the declines of the past few days.
At the start of the second half, all the major Chinese indexes and the Hang Seng were in positive territory for the year. The Shenzhen component was up 4.78% while the CSI 300 index was just 0.24% higher as of end June. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index was also up 5.86% in the same period.
Timeline of events
The latest sell-off in Chinese stocks started after a Bloomberg report last week said Chinese regulators are planning heavy penalties for ride-hailing giant Didi that could include massive fines and a forced delisting.
Following that first domino, reports also emerged late last week of a government crackdown on China’s private education sector, which sent U.S.-listed Chinese education stocks tumbling. Chinese education stocks in Hong Kong also took a beating, with New Oriental Education & Technology Group, Koolearn Technology and China Beststudy Education Group plunging more than 30% each on Monday.
Next, China’s antitrust regulator ordered Tencent on the weekend to give up its exclusive music licensing rights and slapped a fine on the company for anti-competitive behavior
lol look at this guy caring so much about Chinese stock market that no one in China cares about.Please ignore the smokescreen articles/rants posted in this thread that this is only related to Chinese stocks in US stock markets or targeting foreign investors in Chinese companies...
Chinese stocks are now among Asia's worst-performing as Beijing crackdown spooks investors
Days of heavy selling in Chinese stocks have left two major indexes in the country as the worst-performing markets of Asia-Pacific.www.cnbc.com
- The CSI 300 which tracks the biggest mainland China stocks, along with Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index, are currently among the worst-performing in Asia-Pacific.
- Separately, the MSCI Emerging Markets index has also tumbled into negative territory for the year. Chinese internet giants like Tencent, Alibaba and Meituan are among the top 5 constituents of the index, as of Jun 30.
- The declines come as Chinese regulators continue to step up their oversight in sectors spanning from technology to education and food-delivery.
Days of heavy selling in Chinese stocks have left two major indexes in the country as the worst-performing markets of Asia-Pacific.
At the close of regional markets on Tuesday, the CSI 300 — which tracks the largest stocks listed in mainland China — had plunged 8.83% so far this year. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index also suffered heavy losses, falling 7.88% in the same period.
“There hasn’t been a single two-day decline (for the Hang Seng index) since the Financial Crisis that has exceeded the magnitude of the last two days,” analysts at Bespoke Investment Group wrote in a note.
Other major mainland indexes such as the Shanghai composite and Shenzhen component were also in negative territory for the year, among the few major Asia-Pacific markets that lost ground year-to-date.
Separately, the MSCI Emerging Markets index has also tumbled into negative territory for the year. Chinese internet giants such as Tencent, Alibaba and Meituan were among the top 5 constituents of the index, as of Jun 30.
The declines come as Chinese regulators continue to step up their oversight in sectors spanning from technology to education and food-delivery. The increased scrutiny spooked investors and sent many scrambling for the exit.
Hong Kong and China markets traded mixed in Wednesday morning trade, struggling to recover from the declines of the past few days.
At the start of the second half, all the major Chinese indexes and the Hang Seng were in positive territory for the year. The Shenzhen component was up 4.78% while the CSI 300 index was just 0.24% higher as of end June. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index was also up 5.86% in the same period.
Timeline of events
The latest sell-off in Chinese stocks started after a Bloomberg report last week said Chinese regulators are planning heavy penalties for ride-hailing giant Didi that could include massive fines and a forced delisting.
Following that first domino, reports also emerged late last week of a government crackdown on China’s private education sector, which sent U.S.-listed Chinese education stocks tumbling. Chinese education stocks in Hong Kong also took a beating, with New Oriental Education & Technology Group, Koolearn Technology and China Beststudy Education Group plunging more than 30% each on Monday.
Next, China’s antitrust regulator ordered Tencent on the weekend to give up its exclusive music licensing rights and slapped a fine on the company for anti-competitive behavior
lol look at this guy caring so much about Chinese stock market that no one in China cares about.
stock market != economy
Because both parties will benefit their own parties by tearing society apart.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.
China just nuked Wall Street capitalists. Their investment evaporated in a flash.