By Samuel Shen and Summer Zhen
You are watching: Analysis-China’s retail investor sours quickly on stocks
SHANGHAI/HONG KONG (Reuters) – Day-trader Lu Delong’s optimism for a China stocks rally quickly evaporated in the first week of the year when, just three months after positioning for a surge fuelled by Beijing’s stimulus pledges, he was forced to dump shares and tally his losses.
Many retail investors like Lu sold shares in early January, precipitating the weakest start to the new year in almost a decade for China’s $11 trillion stock market.
“The savage sell-off is beyond my understanding. I haven’t seen Trump announce anything fresh against China,” said Lu, referring to the uncertainties surrounding U.S. trade policy under President-elect Donald Trump.
“The only plausible explanation is that the market is squeezing the government for more forceful policies,” said Lu, who turned bullish on Chinese stocks in late September but now plans to hold just cash in the run-up to the Chinese Lunar New Year holidays starting late January.
Disillusioned with economic policies and the worries around U.S. trade tariffs, retail investors are selling, threatening to knock Chinese shares back into a years-long downtrend.
Chinese stocks saw their first annual gain in 2024 following an unprecedented three-year decline set off by the COVID-19 pandemic, property sector woes and weak consumer confidence.
Retail money accounts for roughly 70% of China’s share trading, hence there is a risk that a sell-off could trigger a disorderly unwinding of leveraged bets and losses which could stymie Beijing’s efforts to stabilise capital markets.
The government needs a sustainable bull market to fund economic revival but another boom-and-bust would “destroy wealth, hurt consumption and harm China’s economy”, said Dong Baozhen, chairman of Beijing-based asset manager Lingtong Shengtai.
A sell-off would mean another vote of no-confidence from investors who have already vented pessimism over China’s economy in the yuan and bond markets, prompting the government to step in to arrest falls in the currency and bond yields.
See more : Stock Market Today: Dow Dives 729 Points but Bounces Back
‘COLD WATER’
Markets seemed on the cusp of a recovery in late September when Beijing announced interest rate cuts and intent to defend markets. Desperate investors dived into stocks and drove the benchmark index up a whopping 40% over two weeks.
The broad market then cooled as investors waited for more concrete policies, but retail trading remained active, evidenced by high turnover, soaring prices of small-cap shares and a rapid build-up of leveraged bets.
Source link https://finance.yahoo.com/news/analysis-chinas-retail-investor-sours-023230116.html
Source: https://incomestatements.info
Category: News