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Slowing economy: Foreign investors sell $12 billion China shares in August  

Foreign investors sold $12 billion worth of Chinese stocks in August as piecemeal support measures from Beijing failed to assuage concerns over slowing growth in the world’s second-largest economy and a worsening crisis in the country’s property sector. 

According to a report obtained from the Financial Times, the unprecedented outflows come as figures on Thursday showed China’s manufacturing sector contracted for a fifth consecutive month, despite pledges from leaders in late July to deliver more substantial support measures for the vital property sector, which is typically responsible for about a quarter of annual economic activity. 

Simmering tensions with Washington have also dimmed Western investors’ appetite for Chinese assets, with US Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo warning during a four-day visit to the country this week that American companies were starting to see China as “uninvestable”. 

Calculations by the Financial Times based on exchange data show net sales of almost Rmb90 billion ($12.4 billion) worth of Shanghai- and Shenzhen-listed shares by offshore traders in August, more than any month since the programme launched in late 2014. 

Disappointment from global investors

Asset managers and analysts said the surge in sales reflected disappointment from global investors, whose focus has shifted this year from hopes for a broad stimulus to a more targeted bailout for property developers. But Chinese leaders have so far remained reluctant to launch such a rescue. 

Outlook for the country’s real estate market

The report noted that concerns over the outlook for the country’s real estate market have worsened this month as private Chinese developer Country Garden, once considered among those least likely to default, missed payments on international bonds and sought to push back on renminbi repayment obligations coming due next week. 

Meanwhile, shares in China Evergrande, the developer whose defaults on dollar bonds two years ago marked the start of the sector’s liquidity crisis, resumed trading in Hong Kong this week for the first time in 17 months and immediately fell almost 90%. 

She said there had been a handful of property policy changes over the past month, including the easing of mortgage conditions for first-time buyers in the megacities of Guangzhou and Shenzhen. But these amounted to “tiny bits, not the big bang [that would cause] equity inflows from foreign investors”. 

The economic slowdown has weighed heavily on broader valuations of Chinese stocks, dragging the benchmark CSI 300 index down 8% in dollar terms in the year to date even as big markets elsewhere in the world have notched double-digit gains. 

Efforts to prop up shares through cuts to trading fees and other measures, which delivered substantial gains when previously deployed, have likewise failed to provide a lasting boost to investor sentiment. 

 

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