MSCI Says No To China A-Share Inclusion

 | Jun 15, 2016 05:15AM ET

The big news today is that the MSCI has decided to delay plans for a greater inclusion of Chinese shares within its emerging markets indices. Many global fund managers are forced to buy the index, and were China to be included, a steady inflow of funds was predicted to find its way into China’s capital markets.

Chinese markets look to be in for a difficult day, as many had rallied over the past week in expectation of MSCI inclusion. The ASHR Deutsche X-trackers Harvest CSI 300 China A-Shares ETF lost 2% in after-hours trading in the wake of the MSCI decision.

In some ways, it was more surprising how many investment banks came out saying inclusion was more likely than not. I think this may reflect just how aggressive Chinese government campaigning was for inclusion at this round. But very recent changes to stock suspension laws were unlikely to make everyone forget about the massive state intervention in the market of the past year, or the disastrous introduction of trading “circuit-breakers” in January that did an excellent job of accelerating the market selloff, and eventually cost Xiao Gang his job as the head of the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC).

Brexit worries and general macro concerns continued to weigh on markets last night as European markets had a rough session, and the S&P 500 saw its first four-day decline since February. However, the overnight economic data releases were far more upbeat. Eurozone industrial production for April handily beat market estimates, increasing 1.1% month-on-month against expectations for a 0.8% increase.