- Joined
- Jun 13, 2019
Shanghai rallied to about a 7% loss for the day. Bad, but not as bad as it could have been.![]()
Chinese market dives 8% but other world stocks stable
BANGKOK (AP) — China's main stock index tumbled nearly 8% Monday as the country's markets reopened and regulators sought to calm investors over the impact of a virus that has spread to more than...apnews.com
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Shenzhen is down about 8.2%. This is despite the fact China injected about $175 B into the markets over the last week.
I'm curious who's actually doing the selling. Shenzhen is all Series A and B stocks, they can only be owned by Chinese nationals. This could not have been Western investors pulling money out of the market, this was likely party insiders moving money around as a hedge. I'm certain there are trading restrictions that prevent anyone in government from moving more than a maximum amount in daily trading.
Going to be fun to watch what happens over the next 30 days.
Oh... I don't know about that.The conspiracy theory from non-american tinfoils is that America actually ingenered the virus because China has grown too much and so, America released the virus to disrupt China, so they can stay in power.
People these days play too much Plague.Inc and think they are experts in virology.
While I truly doubt anyone in the West engineered this to happen, there are certainly some compelling cases for wanting to do so.
If you're not a Chinese national, you can't outright own a business in China. You have to have a 51% partner and contracts often require your business to hand over all intellectual property. It's really not a good situation.
If large-scale capital flight were to occur - money leaving China, markets crashing left and right - that could change some rules around business ownership. If the Country is suddenly in a position where they need Western investors to take a bigger role in capitalization of projects, those rules could change overnight. This would mean allowing international investors to pick up Series A and B shares in companies like Alibaba, which they currently can't do. They'd probably be prohibited from controlling more than 49% of any entity, and they'd still have to deal with the CCP and PLA, but those investments suddenly become a lot more secure because you're guaranteed to be paid out before anyone else.
A capital fund / VC with preferred shares in a high growth Chinese company would have massive advantages over other investments firms in the US and Europe. A firm that could sell those shares to regular investors would have clients lining up out the door. Something like this could set the table for the kinds of companies that get funded for the next decade. Assuming WuFlu gets dealt with and the markets return to normal, they'd be buying shares cheap with a reasonable expectation of 10% - 20% appreciation in 12 months followed by continuous growth. That's a pretty good deal.
But it's not the best deal. Dunno who pays attention to India, but there are several multi-billion dollar IPOs going on right now. There are a number of others in the pipeline. More importantly, a large part of the population washes their hands regularly because they were a British colony. Capital always demands concessions, if it's thought there's a way to invest in India and get a greater return without having to give away intellectual property, that's going to put a lot of pressure on the disease-addled, financially-strapped CCP to consider their position. To attain a competitive advantage - which they don't absolutely possess - the CCP might give up other stuff going far beyond finance. That could include normalizing currency controls, introducing hygiene to their people, that kind of stuff.
It's not like small capital syndicates in the West to take cruel, obscene steps to open access to markets in the East. Had never happened and never will.
