Market Spared from Crisis
The Chinese market remained
relatively calm yesterday as the US subprime contagion spread to other markets in what could be the most serious
crisis since the Asian financial
turmoil in 1997.
But
economists said there are
potential risks that the
crisis may later have a
substantialimpact on the Chinese economy.
The A-share Shanghai Composite Index edged down on Friday only by 4.7 points, or 0.1 percent after recovering from mid-session slump.
Asia's other major stock markets the same day fell as much as 4 per cent on concerns about a credit weakness in the US.
The Nikkei 225 index dropped 406.51 points, or 2.37 percent while the Korea Composite Stock Price Index fell 80.19 points, or 4.2 percent.
Hong Kong's blue chip Hang Seng Index shed 639 points, or 2.85 percent. In Singapore and Australia, benchmark indices were also down.
The
crisis has spread to Europe, where European Central Bank loaned 94.8
billion euros ($130.2
billion) to banks to ease money shortages as a result of jitters about investments in US
mortgages.
The Bank of Japan and the Reserve Bank of Australia followed suit on Friday.
"It seems the US
crisis has developed to a stage that is far more serious than expected," Dong Yuping, an
economist with the Institute of Finance and Banking of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS), said.
Dong said the
crisis may not be
ultimately stopped until next year and He Fan, from the Institute of World Economics and Politics under the CASS, said it may
evolve into the most serious
turmoil since the 1997 Asian financial
crisis.
Some Chinese companies may have bought the subprime
mortgages in the US, which will cause losses, He said.
Bank of China and China Construction Bank, two of the country's "big four" commercial banks, have admitted to being
affected by the US
crisis. Bank of China said its losses could be several million US dollars.
Some of China's foreign exchange assets may also have been invested in the US
mortgage products, said an
economist who declined to be named.
He from CASS said the US
crisis may drag down the world economy, which would slow down China's exports as well.
Meanwhile, if the US economy slows down, it may lead to decline in prices of oil and other major commodities.
He said this would in turn affect the economic growth of exporters of those commodities, such as Russia and Latin American countries.
"China's exports to those countries would be
affected," He said.
As the international credit crunch intensifies, some of the foreign capital, including the
so-called "hot money" in China, may leave.
"If the capital exodus triggers market shock, China's financial
stability may suffer," He said.
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