As China’s stockmarket corrects, regulators try doing less
So far, they have avoided heavy-handed intervention
THE JOB of China’s top securities cop is a precarious one. Its fortunes are closely linked with the vagaries of the country’s stockmarket. A crash can mean the sack or worse for the man in charge. Xiao Gang, who headed the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) during the spectacular boom and bust of 2015, was fired and has become an object of scorn among investors. Liu Shiyu, who took over from Mr Xiao and saw China rank among the world’s worst-performing markets in 2018, later faced corruption charges (which might have been overlooked had the market done better). As China’s CSI 300 index of blue-chip stocks tumbled by 14% in late February and early March this year, attention turned to their successor, Yi Huiman.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “A new tack”
Finance & economics April 10th 2021
- House prices in the rich world are booming
- The IMF marks up the global recovery
- Janet Yellen calls for a global minimum tax on companies. Could it happen?
- Coinbase goes public with a pop
- Totting up bitcoin’s environmental costs
- As China’s stockmarket corrects, regulators try doing less
- Robert Mundell, an influential international economist, has died
- In poor countries, statistics are both undersupplied and underused
More from Finance & economics
Donald Trump issues fresh tariff threats
But it may be a while before he unleashes a universal levy
China meets its official growth target. Not everyone is convinced
For one thing, 2024 saw the second-weakest rise in nominal GDP since the 1970s
Ethiopia gets a stockmarket. Now it just needs some firms to list
The country is no longer the most populous without a bourse
Are big cities overrated?
New economic research suggests so
Why catastrophe bonds are failing to cover disaster damage
The innovative form of insurance is reaching its limits
“The Traitors”, a reality TV show, offers a useful economics lesson
It is a finite, sequential, incomplete information game