Bad names, bad math or bad luck?
China’s
stocks tumbled in recent weeks. Barely three weeks earlier, on June 12
(Friday), Shanghai Composite (SSEC) closed at 5166.35 points, the highest since
January 18, 2008. Yet by the end of July 3, the SSEC shed 1481.99 points,
losing almost 29 percent of its recent high and more than $2.8 trillion of
value (i.e., 10 times of Greece’s annual GDP).
What is
vexing for policymakers is that the Chinese stock markets ignored signals from
the Chinese leaders and continued their downward fall. Following the 7.40
percent dive on Friday (June 26), the People’s Bank of China (the central bank
of China) on Saturday responded by cutting its benchmark interest rates and the
amount of reserves certain banks are required to hold. The central bank cut its
one-year benchmark lending rate by a quarter of a percentage point to 4.85
percent and its one-year deposit rate by the same scale to 2 percent.
Moreover,
Monday, June 29, was supposed to be an auspicious day when the ceremony for the
establishment of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), a China-led
international bank, was held. But investors disregarded these strong signals
and continued their selling. The SSEC lost 12 percent for the week, the worst
weekly performance since the financial crisis.
As for
why the Chinese stock markets are falling, there have been different theories.
First, it has been discovered that the names of chairmen of the China
Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), the regulator of China’s stock
markets, are ominous. The man who was CSRC chairman for almost a decade, from
December 2002 to October 2011, is named Shang Fulin, meaning the probability of
China’s stock markets going up is zero. Shang’s successor is named Guo Shuqing,
meaning losing all you have, and Guo’s successor is named Xiao Gang, meaning
cutting it all.
Of
course, there is no clear evidence to back up this theory. During Shang Fulin’s
tenure, for instance, China’s stock markets went on a roller-coaster ride. On
December 27, 2002, the day he assumed the position, the SSEC was at 1382.97.
The index increased incrementally to 1777.52 on April 6, 2004 and then declined
to 1080.87 on October 28, 2005. Then the stocks entered a bull market. In the
subsequent two years, the SSEC passed the 2000-point mark (on November 20,
2006), the 3000-point mark (on February 26, 2007), the 4000-point mark
(on May 9, 2007), the 5000-point mark (on August 23, 2007), and the 6000-point
mark (on October 15, 2007), reaching an all-time high of 6092.06 on October 16,
2007. Then the index took a nose dive all the way to 1706.70 on November 4,
2008. On October 31, 2011, the last day of Shang as the chairman of the CSRC,
the SSEC finished at 2468.25. Compared to the points of his first day on
December 27, 2002, this was an increase of 1085.28 points (about 44 percent).
Guo Shuqing did not fare so well. In his 15-month tenure, the SSEC lost 189.85
points (8.3 percent). But since Xiao Gang took it over, the SSEC went up from
2240.02 on March 18, 2013 to its current level of 3686.92 on July 3, 2015, a
healthy growth of 39.2 percent.
Nevertheless,
those who lost their shirts in the last three weeks continue to blame Xiao Gang
for the free-fall. They found out that Xiao was bad at math. According to an
interview with Ms Wu Xiaoli of Phoenix TV in Hong Kong on March 17, 2012, Xiao
confessed that he did well in Chinese literature but poorly in math in his
national university entrance exams. Rumors have it that Xiao could not
comprehend what was the five-day moving average when some of his subordinates
suggested that the CSRC pump funds to stabilize the SSEC at that level. Of
course, stabilizing the stock market is not simply a mathematical problem.
Nobel laureates in mathematics would not necessarily be more equipped to solve
this problem.
Some
blame foreign speculators. They strongly believe that big foreign banks and
institutional investors had been shorting Chinese stocks. Interestingly, the
Global Times, a state-run newspaper that tends to look for the evil
consequences of external forces, came out to dispel the rumor by stating that
“foreign capital has only a small part of the Chinese stock market” and that
“large-scale short selling by foreign investors in the Chinese stock market has
not appeared and is an unlikely scenario.”
Apparently,
the volatility of the stock markets has become a political issue but political
intervention has not been effective. It is likely that Chinese leaders will
find ways to boost the confidence in the Chinese stock markets. But it could
very well backfire if they do not handle the issue well. It is true that the
CCP regime is rich in resources and has a tremendous capacity to influence the
direction of the Chinese stock market. But once the market is going against the
wishes of the government, the credibility of the government will be lost. The
Diplomat
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