XM no presta servicios a los residentes de Estados Unidos de América.

China stocks’ 'policy put' is breaking down



<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><head><title>BREAKINGVIEWS-China stocks’ 'policy put' is breaking down</title></head><body>

The author is a Reuters Breakingviews columnist. The opinions expressed are his own. Refiles to add link and editing credits.

By Hudson Lockett

HONG KONG, July 24 (Reuters Breakingviews) -Chinese officials seem relatively untroubled about their country’s property market dysfunction, judging from their own list of top priorities. Of 60 policy goals from the recent Third Plenum leadership summit published on Sunday, the real estate sector is not mentioned until item 44 — and then in a single paragraph providing scant detail on how to address the top problem weighing on consumption in the $17 trillion economy. But if officials are content to leave the details for later, markets are less sanguine.

For investors, burned time and again by short-lived rallies spurred by hopes of policy support, the complexities of the China trade boil down to a simple reality: President Xi Jinping’s crackdown on leverage has torpedoed home prices, triggered a confidence crisis among homebuyers and left a hole in the country's growth outlook that has yet to be fully filled. The resulting drag has pulled down valuations for companies included in benchmarks such as the Shanghai Composite Index .SSEC and Shenzhen Component Index .SZI.

This is why every time policymakers hint that they are going to start making big moves to help the real estate sector, equities surge higher. They have also reliably walked back those gains. The most recent rally, which kicked off in March, has now fully unwound, leaving the country’s CSI 300 stock benchmark .CSI300 flat since January, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index .HSI is up just 2%, giving up a bull run. Cumulative net purchases of Chinese equities by offshore investors this year peaked at 96 billion yuan ($13.2 billion) in May, and 80% of that amount has since flowed back out.

The 3% fall by the CSI 300 this week suggests markets have little faith that Beijing will fill in the blanks left by the new plenum communique. When details do emerge, they may not have the impact top cadres anticipate. Trading cycles are getting shorter and more volatile, says a strategist at one large European lender who prefers to remain unnamed. He warns that officials’ failure to shore up China’s economy is undoing the old “policy put” of piling into equities in response to vows of imminent reform.

Fleeting rallies are likely to encourage hot money to jump in and out of the market to notch quick profits and avoid losses when officials make promises and then underwhelm on the follow through. That is precisely the sort of volatile scenario for markets Beijing wants dearly to avoid.

Follow @KangHexin on X


CONTEXT NEWS

Chinese leaders ended their Third Plenum leadership summit on July 18, with official statements produced by the gathering reflecting greater urgency among top officials to boost economic growth.

China’s CSI 300 index has shed 3% since the plenum’s full readout over the weekend, leaving the equity benchmark flat this year. The economy grew 4.7% year-on-year in the second quarter, according to official data released on July 15.


Graphics: Global appetite for China stocks fades https://reut.rs/3yey9Gv

Graphics: Chinese equities have reversed Third Plenum gains https://reut.rs/3LDGg2E


Editing by Una Galani and Aditya Srivastav

</body></html>

Descargo de responsabilidades: Cada una de las entidades de XM Group proporciona un servicio de solo ejecución y acceso a nuestra plataforma de trading online, permitiendo a una persona ver o usar el contenido disponible en o a través del sitio web, sin intención de cambiarlo ni ampliarlo. Dicho acceso y uso están sujetos en todo momento a: (i) Términos y Condiciones; (ii) Advertencias de riesgo; y (iii) Descargo completo de responsabilidades. Por lo tanto, dicho contenido se proporciona exclusivamente como información general. En particular, por favor tenga en cuenta que, los contenidos de nuestra plataforma de trading online no son ni solicitud ni una oferta para entrar a realizar transacciones en los mercados financieros. Operar en cualquier mercado financiero implica un nivel de riesgo significativo para su capital.

Todo el material publicado en nuestra plataforma de trading online tiene únicamente fines educativos/informativos y no contiene –y no debe considerarse que contenga– asesoramiento ni recomendaciones financieras, tributarias o de inversión, ni un registro de nuestros precios de trading, ni una oferta ni solicitud de transacción con instrumentos financieros ni promociones financieras no solicitadas.

Cualquier contenido de terceros, así como el contenido preparado por XM, como por ejemplo opiniones, noticias, investigaciones, análisis, precios, otras informaciones o enlaces a sitios de terceros que figuran en este sitio web se proporcionan “tal cual”, como comentarios generales del mercado y no constituyen un asesoramiento en materia de inversión. En la medida en que cualquier contenido se interprete como investigación de inversión, usted debe tener en cuenta y aceptar que dicho contenido no fue concebido ni elaborado de acuerdo con los requisitos legales diseñados para promover la independencia en materia de investigación de inversiones y, por tanto, se considera como una comunicación comercial en virtud de las leyes y regulaciones pertinentes. Por favor, asegúrese de haber leído y comprendido nuestro Aviso sobre investigación de inversión no independiente y advertencia de riesgo en relación con la información anterior, al que se puede acceder aquí.

Advertencia de riesgo: Su capital está en riesgo. Los productos apalancados pueden no ser adecuados para todos. Por favor, tenga en cuenta nuestra Declaración de riesgos.