China’s politics have wrecked its markets

A giant screen shows Chinese President Xi Jinping during an organised media tour to Beijing Stock Exchange in Beijing, China February 17, 2022. REUTERS/Florence Lo – RC2GLS923SVE

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HONG KONG, March 16 (Reuters Breakingviews) – Accumulated political and diplomatic errors are trashing valuations at listed Chinese companies. Although officials belatedly snapped into action on Wednesday, having spent the last few years taking investors for granted, Beijing will struggle to reassure them now.

While the war in Ukraine has derailed markets everywhere, China’s crash is particularly vicious and increasingly indiscriminate. Domestic benchmarks were the world’s worst-performing outside of Russia as of Tuesday’s close; mainland exchanges have trimmed over $2 trillion in market value since the beginning of the year, per Refinitiv data. The biggest companies tracked by the CPI300 are down a fifth, while the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index has retreated to 2008 levels. Domestic traders are even fleeing safe-haven industries the government backs, like defence.

In New York, erstwhile tech favourite Alibaba (9988.HK), which once traded above $300 per share, is falling toward its IPO price of $68, as are many peers. The Golden Dragon Index tracking New York-listed Chinese firms is down around 40% year to date. Dark milestones are lurching into view. At the end of February, for example, the MSCI China Index reported a measly 1.5% annualised gross return since 1992.

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This is mostly self-inflicted. President Xi Jinping’s decision to get close to Russia’s Vladimir Putin may have encouraged the latter to attack Kyiv. Blowback could subject Chinese companies and banks to secondary sanctions, while skyrocketing energy and food prices will cut into demand for Chinese goods and services at home and abroad. On top of that, officials are rolling out draconian methods read more to get control of a resurgent Covid-19 outbreak. That will suppress domestic consumption too, and most listed Chinese companies focus on local markets.

To diplomatic and viral headwinds add policy whimsy. The campaign to root out financial risk has degraded into rambling bureaucratic assaults. In 2021, for instance, the government converted the entire after-school tutoring sector, previously a popular trade, into a non-profit industry overnight read more . The cybersecurity regulator inserted itself into the listings process. Paranoid nationalist politicians refused to accommodate U.S. accounting watchdogs’ reasonable concerns about fraud, increasing the risk that China Inc will soon be locked out of New York.

Until Wednesday, the central government appeared blasé about the selloff. Then Vice Premier Liu He spoke up, promising favourable market policies and more caution with policy changes that might impact prices – he even said he’d try to cooperate with U.S. regulators. That’s exactly what investors want to hear, and China shares posted a huge pop. However, Liu, a financial reformer, doesn’t always speak for the entire government. Scarred investors will watch carefully for how he follows through.

You’re the worst: Shares in Chinese companies have crashed harder than most in 2022

(This story has been updated throughout to reflect Vice Premier Liu He’s speech.)

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CONTEXT NEWS

– China will roll out policy steps favourable for its capital markets while cautiously unveiling measures that risk hurting them, Vice Premier Liu He said on March 16. Onshore and offshore shares rallied sharply on the news.

– China’s benchmark CSI300 index that tracks large companies listed on the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges fell 4.6% to 3,983.81 on March 15, the lowest since June 2020. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index has fallen to levels not seen since 2008.

– The Nasdaq Golden Dragon Index, which tracks U.S.-listed Chinese companies, is down nearly 40% year-to-date. The MSCI China Index is down nearly 30% over the same period.

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Editing by Antony Currie and Katrina Hamlin

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source: reuters.com