Tuesday, January 26, 2016

China stocks plunge to 13-month low amid capital outflow worries

China stocks plunge to 13-month low amid capital outflow worries

Shanghai
CHINA'S stocks tumbled to the lowest levels in 13 months amid concern that capital outflows will accelerate as the economy slows and support for the yuan eats into the nation's foreign reserves.
The Shanghai Composite Index plunged 6.4 per cent to 2,749.79 at the close. All industry groups slumped, ranging from commodity companies to new-economy shares such as technology. Besides data showing that outflows hitting an estimated US$1 trillion last year, investors were concerned about a possible liquidity squeeze even as the central bank flooded the financial system with cash before the upcoming Chinese New Year holiday. Some of the nation's most accurate forecasters said that the stock index may not bottom until it falls to the 2,500 level.
"It's an issue about confidence, and there's no confidence in the market now," said Wu Kan, a fund manager at JK Life Insurance Co in Shanghai. "The depreciating yuan and slowing economic growth have been haunting the market for a while. We are less than two weeks from the spring festival, and it seems that most investors are in no mood to trade any more."
Tuesday's loss was the steepest since Jan 7, when the Shanghai gauge plunged 7 per cent, the second sell-off of more than 6 per cent in a week that prompted the government to cancel its circuit breakers programme after four days. Stocks dropped even as the People's Bank of China (PBOC) injected 440 billion yuan (S$95.5 billion) into the financial system using reverse-repurchase agreements, the most in three years. Policymakers are trying to keep borrowing costs from rising as they contend with the slowest economic growth in a quarter century.
China's gross domestic product growth is seen slowing further to 6.5 per cent this year, from last year's 6.9 per cent. Outflows jumped in December, with the estimated 2015 total reaching a record US$1 trillion, more than seven times higher than the whole of 2014 based on Bloomberg Intelligence data dating back to 2006.
"Capital outflows and demand for cash before Lunar New Year may weigh on the stock market in spite of recent massive fund injection from the PBOC," said Huang Cendong, a Shanghai-based analyst at Sinolink Securities Co.
The CSI 300 Index plunged 6 per cent, led by industrial, energy and technology shares. XCMG Construction Machinery Co, China's biggest crane maker, and Shenzhen O-film Tech Co plunged by the 10 per cent daily limit. PetroChina Co, the largest energy company, dropped 4.7 per cent.
The Shanghai Composite's 47 per cent rout since June has been accompanied by an economy losing momentum, similar to the global financial crisis, when the gauge lost more than two-thirds of its value from peak to trough over the course of a year.
The gauge will bottom once it falls to 2,500 this year, said Michael Every, head of financial markets research at Rabobank Group in Hong Kong. That matches the target of Bocom International Holding Co's Hao Hong, one of the few forecasters to call both the start and peak of China's last equity boom.
Thomas Schroeder, the managing director of Chart Partners Group Ltd, who predicted in October that a rebound in Chinese stocks would not last, said that the benchmark index will drop to 2,400. Huang Weimin, whose Chinese stock-index futures wagers returned more than 6,200 percent last year, advised investors to sell shares as the stock market could drop another 15 per cent in the first half as slowing growth and a weaker yuan fuel capital outflows.
China has been burning through reserves to reduce yuan volatility as the currency lost its status as a one-way bet on appreciation amid an unexpected devaluation in August. The stockpile of reserves plunged US$513 billion last year to US$3.33 trillion, the first annual drop since 1992. BLOOMBERG

Apple reports slowest iPhone sales since 2007 launch

Apple reports slowest iPhone sales since 2007 launch

[SAN FRANCISCO] Apple reported on Tuesday the slowest sales ever of its market-leading iPhone, after years of rocketing growth, but the tech giant still posted record quarterly profit.
Net income for the quarter ending December 26 was two per cent higher than the same period a year earlier at US$18.4 billion, while revenue of US$75.9 billion set another record for the company, also edging up two percent.
The results were largely in line with expectations that sales of iPhones - the driver of two-thirds of Apple revenue - had peaked and that the company would need to find new sources of growth.
Apple shares have slid 20 per cent since last year on these concerns. But in after-market trade Tuesday the stock was down a modest 0.7 per cent at US$99.30.
"Our team delivered Apple's biggest quarter ever, thanks to the world's most innovative products and all-time record sales of iPhone, Apple Watch and Apple TV," chief executive Tim Cook said in an earnings release.
"The growth of our services business accelerated during the quarter to produce record results, and our installed base recently crossed a major milestone of one billion active devices."
Apple reported that, overall, a billion iPhones, iPads, Macintosh computers, iPod touch devices, Apple TV units, and Apple Watch wearable computers had "engaged" with its services in the past three months.
In the fiscal quarter Apple sold 74.8 million iPhones - a record, but only fractionally higher than the 74.5 million in the same period last year and the slowest growth since the lifestyle-altering handsets were introduced in 2007.
Revenue in "Greater China" was up 14 per cent for Apple but weaker in the US and Japan.
A big question for Apple is whether it can continue to drive sales growth in a sluggish global economy, amid increasing competition from rival smartphone makers.
Apple said that it expected revenue in the current quarter to be between US$50 billion and US$53 billion. That would probably mean a decline from the US$58 billion in the same period of 2015.
Apple has been diversifying with new offerings in music and is counting on growth from its Apple Watch and accessories.
The company reported sales of "other products" - including the smartwatch and Beats music products - was US$4.35 billion in the past quarter, but did not break down those figures. Services accounted for US$6 billion.
Sales of iPads saw a 56 per cent drop in revenues and 25 per cent dip in unit sales as the market for tablet computers cooled.
Avi Greengart at the research firm Current Analysis said things did not appear that bad for the world's biggest company by market value.
"Pretty great to be Apple," he said in a tweet. "Your main product (iPhone) is flat, most recent hit (iPad) is down 25%, R&D expenses up, yet profits rise."
AFP

The number every China stock investor's watching as rout deepens

The number every China stock investor's watching as rout deepens


[LONDON] Of all the numbers and superlatives used to describe the rout in China's stock market, the one that is starting to gain more attention is 2,500.
That's where China's main stocks gauge, the Shanghai Composite Index, may find a bottom, according to Hao Hong of Bocom International Holdings Co, one of the few who predicted the start and peak of China's equity boom. He says the gauge would regain its investment appeal over government bonds when it reaches that point. For Shanghai Bingsheng Asset Management, the level will spur the government to marshal its spending power and stand against sellers.
As the US$5.7 trillion Chinese equity market continues to tumble, the 2,500 level would represent declines of 9 per cent from Tuesday's close and about 50 per cent from the seven-year high reached in June. Signs are growing that stability in China is key to the return of calm in the global markets. Tandem moves between the Shanghai measure and the MSCI All-Country World Index that tracks benchmarks in developed and emerging markets reached a five-year high this month.
"The 2,500 level is one that's psychologically important to investors," said Li Jingyuan, general manager at Shanghai Bingsheng Asset Management. "I don't see too much room for a decline from the current level. The government will intervene at this stage. Because if they don't do it, the market will have no confidence at all." Concerns about accelerating capital outflows from China and the slowest economic growth since 1990 are driving the Shanghai Composite toward levels not seen since the measure began a debt-fuelled surge in late 2014. The government intervention that helped arrest further declines last year has been less apparent this year, with Chinese equities back in their second bear market in seven months and volatility climbing.


China's market turmoil has reverberated around the world in 2016, helping wipe out more than US$6 trillion from equity values. Global stocks are heading for their worst monthin 3 1/2 years amid waning confidence about the Chinese government's ability to stabilize the economy with its supportive policies.
The following are the views of analysts and strategists on where they see the Shanghai Composite is headed:
* Hong, the chief China strategist at Bocom International in Hong Kong, says the difference between the earnings yield of shares and bond yields will tend to increase toward its historical highs. That would translate into a level of around 2,500 for the Shanghai gauge.
"While I think the national team could be buying again here and there, it should now be realized that its buying cannot change the trend of weakening fundamentals. I am still seeing 2,500 for now. We will decide again whether this level will hold when we come to it. Situation is in flux."
* Mari Oshidari, a Tokyo-based senior strategist at Okasan Securities Group Inc: "Shanghai Composite's 2,500 would be a level we saw during the start of a bull market. In such strong downward pressure, you can't say shares will stop falling beyond that level, but investors will focus on it. Beyond 2,500, the possibility of state intervention will increase, though that would mean it would take longer for the market to normalize."
* William Wong, head of sales trading at Shenwan Hongyuan Group Co in Hong Kong: "Sentiment is very weak ahead of the Chinese New Year amid the concern over capital outflows and currency risk. No effective supportive levels in the near term; 2,500 would be the next support level for Shanghai Composite. Watch out for more panic selling."
* Liu Xiaolong, portfolio manager at GF Fund Management: "The global economy is already doing very poorly, the market's expectation of a crisis is already built in. A big drop occurs when there's a big gap with expectation. I see the Shanghai Composite at 2,500 and ChiNext at 1,500 to be solid bottoms, and the usual bottom range is about 10-20 per cent above those levels."
BLOOMBERG

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