SHANGHAI/HONG KONG—Investors erased $420 billion from China’s benchmark stock index on Feb. 3, sold the yuan, and dumped commodities as fears about the spreading coronavirus and its economic impact drove selling on the first day of trade in China since the Lunar New Year.
The market slide came even as the central bank poured cash into the financial system despite apparent regulatory moves to curb selling.
By lunchtime, the benchmark Shanghai Composite index sat 8 percent lower near an almost one-year trough and poised to post its worst day in more than four years.
The yuan opened at its weakest level in 2020 and slid almost 1.2 percent, past the symbolic 7-per-dollar level, as the falls soured the mood in markets throughout Asia.
Shanghai-traded oil, iron ore, copper, and soft commodities contracts all posted sharp drops, catching up with sliding global prices.
The new virus has created alarm because it is spreading quickly, much about it is unknown, and authorities’ drastic response is likely to drag on economic growth.
“This will last for some time,” said Iris Pang, Greater China economist at ING.
“It’s uncertain whether factory workers, or how many of them, will return to their factories. ... We haven’t yet seen corporate earnings since the [spread of the] coronavirus. Restaurants and retailers may have very little sales.”
More than 2,500 stocks fell by the daily limit of 10 percent. The Shanghai Composite last sat at 2,734.7 and the onshore yuan at 7.0165 per dollar.
Copper sank to its lowest in more than three years, falling by its daily limit of 7 percent, while aluminum, zinc, and lead shed more than 4 percent and soybeans dropped 2 percent.
Clear Message
Amid the selldown, the People’s Bank of China injected 1.2 trillion yuan ($173.81 billion) into money markets through reverse bond repurchase agreements. It also unexpectedly cut the interest rate on those short-term funding facilities by 10 basis points.China’s securities regulator moved to limit short selling and urged mutual fund managers not to sell shares unless they face investor redemptions, sources told Reuters.
Cities like Wuhan, where the virus originated, remain in virtual lockdown, and China is facing mounting international isolation. Analysts are beginning to suspect the impact will be deeper than the hit delivered by the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) outbreak in 2003.
“Although most analysts agree it is too early to estimate the impact of [the virus] on the global economy, one thing I am increasingly more certain of is that the near-term shock to Chinese economy will be much higher than that in SARS period,” said Tommy Xie, head of Greater China research at OCBC Bank.
“The shock to Chinese manufacturing and industry sectors is likely to be unprecedented.”