Global Markets Buoyed By China's New Market Intervention

 | Sep 09, 2015 01:51AM ET

Chinese markets’ ‘Sophie’s Choice’

Global markets have been buoyed by China’s new market intervention and the announcement from the China’s Ministry of Finance (MoF) that they will speed up fiscal spending. Japanese markets have been the standout performer in Asia today, seeing a record daily rise off the back of plans to cut corporate tax rates.

Having said that, the methods by which the Shanghai Composite (SHCOMP) is rising are somewhat concerning. Volumes in China’s futures markets have fallen dramatically since their reopening after the holiday for the World War II commemoration. A range of new restrictions from increased margin requirements to limits on high frequency trading (HFT) have served to throttle liquidity in the Chinese futures market.

The futures markets were previously free of some of the restrictions of China’s cash markets, such as being able to buy and sell a stock on the same day. In this way, despite having a far smaller pool of investors, it provided key signals to trading in the cash markets.

This apparently marked the Chinese futures markets as a source of volatility to be quelled. It appears China has taken a ‘Sophie’s Choice’ and decided that the futures markets must be killed in order for the cash markets to live. This appears to also be supported by some judicious buying to support the markets as well. The late session surge yesterday was driven by the large cap ‘Red Chips,’ a fairly strong indication of government buying.

This flip-flop of policies regarding support for the Chinese stock market surely has only served to further damage investor confidence in the markets, quite apart from the exact level it is trading at. It is difficult to know how this will play out going forward, or how long the government expects to continue these policies. But it is difficult to be confident of any upturn in the Shanghai Composite until it takes another trip down to at least the 2850 level.

Moves on the SHCOMP have been supported by the MoF’s statement to urge the implementation of fiscal policy. The construction and materials sector has been the best performing on the index, up 3.1%, with a number of companies perceived to benefit from increased fiscal spending trading up 10% - the inter-day limit.

Fresh fiscal stimulus is not the issue facing China in 2H, it is getting their already-promised fiscal spending targets delivered. Banks and provinces have been reticent to spend as borrowing costs have risen and credit has been difficult to come by. The main issue has been moving previously-issued local government financing vehicle (LGFV) debt onto the government’s balance sheet through the issuance of provincial bonds.

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Banks baulked at the low yields on offer in the newly issued debt, and had to be forced by the government to buy them. This process has sucked up a lot of liquidity and made banks and provinces less inclined to spend. Direct intervention by the MoF and other government ministries is likely the only way to get fiscal funds flowing and meet this year’s targets.

Japan

The Japanese market has seen an impressive 5.55% rally today, its strongest one day performance since 2008. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe announced plans for dramatic cuts to corporate tax rates. He stated that he planned to initially cut the current corporate tax rate of 35% by 3.3%, and push it down into the twenties over several years until it reaches as level that compares favourably in the international context.

The market was no doubt buoyed by this news alongside renewed Chinese stock market support and fiscal spending, as well as further weakness in the yen. However, the Nikkei 225 was also partly just very oversold and primed for a rally on short covering alone. The percentage of stocks trading below their 200-day moving average had reached 20.4%, its lowest level since mid-2012.

With the temporary calm in global markets, investors were obviously seeing a good point to cover shorts or invest in stocks at knocked down valuations, particularly in high growth potential stocks. Better valuations in high growth stocks saw the healthcare sector lead the index, gaining 6.3%.