Business

China trading suspended after shares plunge

21:54 pm on 4 January 2016

The New Zealand stock exchange doesn't begin its 2016 trading until 10am, but share indicies have already fallen in Shanghai, Sydney, Tokyo and Hong Kong.

Concerned Chinese investors look at prices of shares (red for price rising and green for price falling) at a stock brokerage house Photo: AFP

Trading on China's stock markets has been suspended after the market dramatically plunged and triggered a new system meant to limit volatility.

The benchmark Shanghai Composite index fell 6.9 percent while the blue-chip CSI 300 Index dropped 7 percent.

The technology-heavy Shenzhen Composite was the worst performer and fell by more than 8 percent.

Trading had been halted earlier in the day for 15 minutes after the stock market fell by 5 percent.

But shares continued to fall, leading regulators to end trading early.

Under China's new circuit-breaker mechanism, moves of 7 percent from the previous session's close trigger a trading suspension for the day.

The measures were introduced in early December after the stock market's turbulent sell-off over the summer. They came into effect for the first time on Monday (local time).

One factor behind the stock market falls was a manufacturing survey that pointed to more bad news for the Chinese economy.

The Caixin/Markit purchasing managers' index (PMI) slipped to 48.2 in December, marking the 10th consecutive month of shrinking factory activity in the sector.

A reading below 50 suggests a contraction in the sector, while anything above 50 suggests growth.

The private PMI survey, which focuses more on small and medium-sized businesses, came after an official survey on Friday, which looked at larger companies, suggested a fifth month of shrinking factory activity.

In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng index was down 2.8 percent at 21,293.13.

Chinese state media agency Xinhua News tweeted this cartoon to illustrate the trading halt.

China's stock market falls on Monday point to "volatile trading for the rest of the year" according to the BBC's Karishma Vaswani.

"Retail investors in the Chinese stock market are often driven by sentiment and tend to follow the crowd. When they hear of some bad news from brokers or their friends, and other people start selling - they start selling too."

Shares in the rest of Asia followed China lower. Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 index closed 3.1 percent lower at 18,450.98 as a stronger yen weighed on shares of major exporters.

The market was also catching up with last week's declines in the US, after being closed for the past two sessions.

Australia's S&P/ASX 200 index closed down 0.5 percent at 5,270.50, while South Korea's Kospi index finished down 2.2 percent at 1,918.76.

A jump in oil prices boosted Australia's energy sector with shares of Woodside Petroleum up 3 percent.

Brent crude gained 3 percent, rising as high as $38.40 a barrel, after Saudi Arabia's execution of a prominent Shia Muslim cleric ignited tensions in the region, raising concerns among investors about oil supplies.

-BBC