China ETFs were among the worst performers Monday, with Chinese equities off to their worst start to a second half of a year since 2015.
The CSOP FTSE China A50 ETF (NYSEArca: AFTY) was the worst performer Monday, plunging 5.0%. Meanwhile, the iShares China Large-Cap ETF (NYSEArca: FXI), the largest China-related ETF, declined 2.1% and the Xtrackers Harvest CSI 300 China A ETF (NYSEArca: ASHR), the largest China A-shares related ETF, decreased 4.1%.
Shanghai markets have slipped into a bear market amid concerns the economy will struggle due to rising tensions with the U.S., Bloomberg reports. China’s purchasing manager index readings for June already revealed a gauge of export orders falling, which suggested that the trade war is already impeding growth.
Domestic issues are also weighing on sentiment, with a gauge for property shares dipping to the lowest since October 2016.
“Expectations that China will impose more property controls are weighing on developer shares as the market is still overheated,” Jiang Yining, an analyst with Capital Securities, told Bloomberg.
Yuan Weakens Against U.S. Dollar
Meanwhile, the yuan currency continued to weaken against the U.S. dollar. The yuan was trading near an eight-month low after depreciating by a record in June.
Furthermore, Beijing’s efforts to deleverage through new regulation while maintaining economic growth has also put pressure on the markets.
“The sell-off was and is an impact of regulatory tightening,” Lauren Gloudeman, a research analyst with Rhodium Group’s China markets research team, told CNBC.
Related: Impact of Chinese A-Shares Lost in Trade Spats
Glouderman argued that the new policies limit the scale to which banks can keep riskier items off balance sheets, which has caused some local non-financial institutions called “trust companies” to exit their stock holdings.
“We don’t know how much [of]the deleveraging process has yet to take place,” Sean Darby, chief global equity strategist at Jefferies, told CNBC. “In a way the stock market is a leading indicator on the economy because of liquidity concerns.”
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