Virus fears wipe $393 billion off China's stock market
despite government support moves
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[February 03, 2020] By
Winni Zhou and Noah Sin
SHANGHAI/HONG KONG (Reuters) - Investors
erased $393 billion from China's benchmark stock index on Monday, sold
the yuan and dumped commodities as fears about the spreading coronavirus
and its economic impact drove selling on the first day of trade in China
since the Lunar New Year.
A nearly 8% plunge on the Shanghai composite index was its biggest daily
fall in more than four years. The Chinese yuan blew past the
7-per-dollar mark and Shanghai-traded commodities from palm oil to
copper hit their maximum down limits.
The wipeout came even as the central bank made its biggest cash
injection to the financial system since 2004 and despite apparent
regulatory moves to curb selling.
The total number of deaths in China from the coronavirus rose to 361 by
Sunday, compared with 17 on Jan. 23, when Chinese markets last traded.
"You wanted to know what a real decoupling from China might look like,
or what a 'What if everyone just stayed at home and didn't buy
anything?' economic thought-experiment looks like? Well here you are,
folks," Rabobank strategist Michael Every said in an afternoon note.
The yuan began onshore trade at its weakest this year and was down 1.2%
by the afternoon, sliding past the symbolic 7-per-dollar level <CNY=CFXS>
to close at 7.0257. [MKTS/GLOB]
Shanghai-traded oil, iron ore, copper and soft commodities contracts all
posted sharp drops, catching up with sliding global prices.
The new virus has created alarm because it is spreading quickly, much
about it is unknown, and authorities' drastic response is likely to drag
on economic growth.
"This will last for some time," said Iris Pang, Greater China economst
at ING.
"It's uncertain whether factory workers, or how many of them, will
return," she said. "We haven't yet seen corporate earnings since the
(spread of the) coronavirus. Restaurants and retailers may have very
little sales."
More than 2,500 stocks fell by the daily limit of 10%. The Shanghai
Composite closed down 7.7% at 2,746.6, its lowest since August and a
modest recovery from early trade, when it was down nearly 9%.
Copper <SCFcv1> sank to its lowest in more than three years, falling by
its daily limit of 7%, while aluminum <SAFcv1>, zinc <SZNcv1> and lead
<SPBcv1> shed more than 4% and soybeans <DSAcv1> dropped 2%. [MET/L]
Bond prices surged, with March futures contracts for 10-year bonds
jumping 1.4% <CFTH0>.
The People's Bank of China (PBOC) said the stocks plunge had irrational
or even panic elements, triggered by herd behavior, in a newspaper
commentary published after markets closed.
The sell-off cast a pall over Asia, though losses were contained because
a slide had been expected. Hong Kong's Hang Seng <.HSI>, which shed
almost 10% in two weeks, closed 0.2% firmer.
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A men wearing a mask walk at the Shanghai Stock Exchange building at
the Pudong financial district in Shanghai, China, as the country is
hit by an outbreak of a new coronavirus, February 3, 2020. REUTERS/Aly
Song
(GRAPHIC: China stocks plummet as virus takes economic toll -
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/mkt/13/76/76/Pasted%20Image.jpg)
CLEAR MESSAGE
Amid the selldown, the PBOC had injected 1.2 trillion yuan ($173.81
billion) into money markets through reverse bond repurchase agreements,
the largest such move since 2004, according to DBS analysts.
It also unexpectedly cut the interest rate on those short-term funding
facilities by 10 basis points.
The chance of a benchmark lending rate cut on Feb. 20, the date of its
next monthly fixing, has significantly increased, central bank adviser
Ma Jun said.
China's securities regulator moved to limit short selling and urged
mutual fund managers not to sell shares unless they face investor
redemptions, sources told Reuters.
"It is a clear message that they want to take growth-supportive measures
and keep the market reassured," Mayank Mishra, a macro strategist at
Standard Chartered Bank in Singapore, said of the PBOC move.
"They are managing the situation well. The timing of the repo rate cut
came a little quicker than some people were expecting, but they wanted
to send a clear message."
Beijing has also said it would help firms that produce vital goods
resume work as soon as possible, state broadcaster CCTV said.
Cities like Wuhan, where the virus originated, remain in virtual
lockdown and China faces mounting international isolation. Analysts are
beginning to suspect the impact will be greater than the hit from the
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) outbreak in 2002-2003.
That pounded growth across Asia, especially in Hong Kong, and sent the
Hang Seng index down by 18% over four months.
Though it quickly rebounded then, China's share of the global economy
has grown fourfold since and, with so many unknowns, few are willing to
call a bottom just yet.
"At this point, we don't see this as a buying opportunity," said
Invesco's David Chao, a global market strategist for Asia ex-Japan. "We
are in the midst of the escalation period."
(Additional reporting by Luoyan Liu and Sam Shen in Shanghai, Mai Ngyuen
in Hanoi and Wayne Cole in Sydney; Writing by Tom Westbrook; Editing by
Jacqueline Wong and Clarence Fernandez)
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