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Chinese Stocks Overcome Early Swings to Cap Best Day in a Week


(Bloomberg) — Chinese stocks rebounded from their worst week since late July as Beijing reinforced its commitment to shoring up the economy with a fiscal support plan.

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The CSI 300 Index ended Monday’s session up 1.9%, its biggest gain in nearly a week, after swinging between gains and losses earlier. A Bloomberg Intelligence gauge of Chinese developers jumped more than 4% before paring the advance to a little over 1%.

The price moves underscore cautious optimism as traders await more details on the fiscal measures. Finance Minister Lan Fo’an promised new steps to support the property sector and hinted at greater government borrowing at the Saturday briefing, but fell short of giving a headline dollar figure. Revved up fiscal spending is seen as holding the key to sustaining the stock market rally ignited by the central bank’s stimulus blitz in late September.

“Despite no large fiscal stimulus number, the MOF press conference was still an upside surprise to us,” HSBC Holdings Plc economists including Jing Liu wrote in a note. “The policy pivot looks very much here to stay, with the improving risk appetite creating a wealth effect in both the stock and property markets.”

In a separate Monday briefing, officials from various Chinese departments vowed to step up policy support for businesses.

The mood in Hong Kong was more muted, with an index of Chinese shares listed in the city trading 0.6% lower as of 3:11 p.m. local time. Data on Sunday showed China’s deflationary problems became more entrenched in September, with consumer prices still weak and factory gate prices continuing to fall.

‘Upside Capped’

Local governments will be allowed to use special bonds to buy unsold homes, Lan and his deputies said at the Saturday briefing, without giving an amount. Lan hinted at room for issuing more sovereign bonds and vowed to relieve the debt burden of local governments, signaling a possible rare revision to the budget that could come in the next few weeks.

Prior to the weekend, investors and analysts surveyed by Bloomberg had expected China to deploy as much as 2 trillion yuan ($283 billion) in fresh fiscal stimulus on Saturday, including potential subsidies, consumption vouchers and financial support for families with children.

Market volatility had risen in the run up to the MOF briefing, with the CSI 300 Index sliding 3.3% last week. As the rally cools, concern may grow that the latest rebound may be yet another false dawn. The market has been caught in a start-stop cycle of gains and losses a few times before as Beijing’s piecemeal approach to stimulus produced only brief rebounds.

“I suspect November’s US election and the FOMC could delay large stimulus to December or later, and investors might stay away before that and third-quarter results, so upside could be a bit capped for now,” said Xin-Yao Ng, an investment director at abrdn Asia Ltd.

–With assistance from John Cheng.

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