“Never give a sword to a man who can’t dance.” – Confucius
Intervention from Beijing
Have Chinese stocks, supported by fresh government intervention, reached their bottom?
This week, from Monday through Thursday, the Shanghai Composite Index is up 5.52 percent. Similarly, over this time, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index is up 3.53 percent.
Still, these indexes have a lot of ground to make up. The Shanghai Composite Index is down 22.61 percent since September 2021. Meanwhile, the Hang Seng Index is down over 50 percent in the last six years.
Chinese stocks have lost a combined $7 trillion since 2021. The poor stock market performance has become an embarrassment for President Xi Jinping.
Several years ago, he was relishing in his nifty slogan: “The East is rising, the West is declining.” Now, he’s compelling regulators to devise a rescue.
In late-January, Beijing announced several interventions to, hopefully, stimulate the Chinese economy and revive the stock market. This week, on February 5, bank reserve ratio requirements were cut by 50 basis points. This is expected to free up about one trillion yuan ($139.04) worth of long term funds. Continue reading







