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China has banned brokers from opening overseas trading accounts, the Financial Times reported. Chinese regulators ordered brokerages to shut down "new account opening channels for domestic investors." AdvertisementAdvertisementChinese regulators have banned brokerage firms from opening overseas trading accounts for local investors, according to a report from The Financial Times. The regulator asked brokers to stop offering services to local and overseas investors, and that "opening overseas fund accounts for domestic investors is prohibited." Overseas investors have sold Chinese equities at a record pace in 2023.
Persons: , Lehman, Nicholas Spiro Organizations: Financial Times, Service, China's Securities Regulatory Commission, Overseas, Lauressa Locations: China, Beijing
China Evergrande stock jumped as much as 82% Wednesday, leading other Chinese property names higher. Also lifting shares was commentary in the state-owned Securities Times, which called for further easing of restrictions on the property market. AdvertisementAdvertisementThat comes after Beijing has already introduced a raft of measures to prop up the real estate sector and the broader economy. Meanwhile, Evergrande — a former $50 billion real estate giant that last month filed for Chapter 15 bankruptcy protection — remains the world's most indebted property developer. Days prior, a company filing showed a loss of 33 billion yuan in the six months up to June 30, adding on to the 582 billion yuan in losses from the last two years.
Persons: China Evergrande, Evergrande, Logan, Evergrande —, Lehman, Nicholas Spiro Organizations: Securities Times, Service, Country Garden Holdings, Logan Group, Hong, Mainland, Citi, Zhongront, Lauressa Locations: China, Wall, Silicon, Hong Kong, China's, Beijing
And, similar to the crisis that ultimately toppled Lehman Brothers in 2008, much of China's troubles are rooted in its property sector. China's property crisisFront and center for any comparison between today's China and the US in 2008 is the real estate market. "The boom that characterized the property sector of the last decade is over," he said. AdvertisementAdvertisementStill, given the scale of China's property market, policymakers may need to step in with fiscal stimulus to avoid catastrophe. "Rather, it'll be a slow-moving, structural economic crisis that could last for years.
Persons: hasn't, Lehman, Xi Jinping, Alfredo Montufar, William Hurst, Hurst, it's, Helu, Evergrande, Nicholas Spiro, Spiro Organizations: Service, Lehman Brothers, People's Bank of, China Center, Conference Board, Citi, Zhongrong, University of Cambridge, Country Garden Holdings, Lauressa Locations: China, Wall, Silicon, People's Bank of China, Japan, Beijing
Commercial property is a bright spot in Chinese real estate, in contrast with the doom and gloom of the residential housing market. Likewise, property group CIFI Holdings posted a 23% year-on-year drop in home sales in China for the first half, but reported a 69.5% lift in its property investment revenue. While some investors sold assets to stay liquid, Spiro said the commercial sector generally has more supportive government and fiscal policies. All in all, the Chinese commercial property sector's resilience lies in its ability to rebound faster than its residential counterpart. Down but not outBut unlike housing, the commercial sector is rebounding particularly after lockdowns ended and government incentives kicked in, CBRE said.
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