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China shares wipe out 2015 gains as stocks tumble 8.5%
« on: August 24, 2015, 02:24:55 pm »
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/china-shares-wipe-out-2015-gains-as-stocks-tumble-85-2015-08-24

Chinese stocks plummeted Monday, erasing gains for the year, as fears about the deepening effects of a slowdown in the world’s No. 2 economy rattled investors world-wide.

Stock markets slid across Asia and a number of regional currencies fell to fresh multiyear lows. China’s main stock index, which closed 8.5% lower on Monday, has tipped into negative territory for the year after gaining as much as 60% through its June peak. Benchmarks in Japan and Australia both shed nearly 4%.

At the heart of the selloff is the concern that the once-highflying Chinese economy may be slowing down dramatically, which has triggered steep losses in global stock markets, commodities and emerging markets. China’s surprise move to devalue its yuan two weeks ago — which could make its exports more competitive — and a string of weak data signal the economy may be feebler than expected, despite a campaign to rev up growth including interest rate cuts and measures to boost lending.

Traders are looking to China’s next easing move after The Wall Street Journal reported that the central bank is preparing to flood the banking system with liquidity to increase lending. While some economists say that China still has plenty of levers to pull to get its economy back into gear, the lack of official action over the weekend spooked investors Monday morning.

“The trigger was China,” said Nicholas Teo, a market analyst at CMC Markets in Singapore. “It is no longer the factory of the world but a huge consumer of the world’s products,” which is sparking worries for global firms with business there, he added.

The Shanghai Composite SHCOMP, -8.49%  closed down 8.5% at 3,209.91, bringing its losses since its mid-June peak to nearly 38%. At that point, the index had doubled in value over the preceding 12 months.
Stock market selloff: Dow sinks 531 points (3:37)

U.S. stocks tumbled on Friday as the Dow industrials plunged 531 points, dragging the index into correction territory.

China’s small-cap stocks have also been battered: The Shenzhen benchmark 399106, -7.70%   closed down 7.7% on Monday, breaching the worst point of its summer selloff for the first time.

Some 1,968 stocks fell by the maximum 10% allowed by regulators on the Shanghai and Shenzhen markets combined, or 68% of all stocks in China, according to Wind Information Co. Among the hardest hit stocks in China were brokerages, which helped spur a yearlong rally by funding stock buying on borrowed money. Citic Securities Co., one of China’s biggest, limited down Monday and has fallen more than 50% year to date.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index HSI, -5.17%  was last down 3.9% at 21,543.02 after slipping into bear-market territory last week, defined as a drop of more than 20% from a recent high. A benchmark of Chinese firms listed in Hong Kong is trading below the 10,000 level, its lowest since May 2014, and was last down 5.2% at 9,665.62.

Elsewhere in the region, Japan’s Nikkei Stock Average NIK, -4.61%  was down 3.2%, Australia’s S&P ASX 200 was off 3.4% and South Korea’s Kospi SEU, -2.47%   was down 2.1%. Taiwan’s Taiex Y9999, -4.84% Asia’s worst performing stock index year-to-date — having shed 22% in that period — fell 6.2%.

The regional MSCI Asia Pacific stock index, was down 16% from its April peak, which was its highest since the global financial crisis, in U.S. dollar terms as of Friday. It is now trading at its lowest level since February 2014.

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Or in shorter terms: China has arrived.
The Republic is lost.