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Chinese brokers lessened
possessions of stocks obtained with acquired cash by the most in three years as
money needs expanded before the week-long Lunar New Year occasions. The
outstanding value of margin debt on the Shanghai Stock Exchange fell 3.1
percent on Feb. 13 to 779.2 billion yuan ($124.9 billion), according to data
from the bourse. That’s the biggest drop since Jan. 20, 2012, when it slid 4.8
percent.
Some investors in the world’s
second-largest economy are raising cash to pay for gifts and food before the
holidays, which start on Feb. 18 and will spur the Shanghai exchange to shut
through Feb. 24. The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index has jumped 52 during
the past year, the best performance among major markets tracked by Bloomberg,
as central bank stimulus encouraged traders to boost margin debt to an all-time
high earlier this month.
“Some investors have chosen to
hold cash instead of stocks when the market is shut for so long,” Wei Wei, an
analyst at West China Securities Co., said by phone from Shanghai. “They want
to be less exposed to uncertainty during the holidays. The fundamentals of the
market haven’t changed.”
The extraordinary estimation
of edge exchanging on the Shanghai trade rose to a record 805.1 billion yuan on
Feb. 11, with utilized stock buys surging more than 10-fold in the course of
recent years. Chinese authorities have taken steps to cool the use of borrowed
money. The securities regulator suspended new margin accounts at three of the
nation’s biggest brokerages last month and issued a notice to ban loans to
traders with less than 500,000 yuan. In a margin trade, investors use their own
money for just a portion of their stock purchase, borrowing the rest from a
brokerage. The loans are backed by the investors’ equity holdings, meaning that
they may be forced to sell when prices fall to repay their loan.
In an edge exchange, investors
utilize their own particular cash for simply an allotment of their stock buy,
obtaining the rest from a business. The credits are supported by the financial
specialists' value possessions, implying that they may be compelled to offer
when costs tumble to reimburse their obligation. Investors’ interpretation that
regulators are stifling money markets through the suspension isn't exact, CSRC
representative Deng Ge said, by proclamation on the commission's site. The
controller made a move "to secure speculators' rights and backing the
solid development of edge exchanging," Deng said.
Concerns are growing, too,
over other debt-fueled investment, including so-called umbrella trusts—products
that take cash from wealth-management products and hedge funds and pump the
money into equities. The debt that funneled into China’s stocks last year helped make
the Shanghai Composite the world’s best performer in 2014. The worry is that
the widespread use of debt risks making the market far more unstable. Despite
efforts to open the market to foreign fund managers, the market remains mostly
made up of individual Chinese investors who could be left with steep losses if
their leveraged bets were to turn sour.
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