China

http://www.stocktiming.com/Monday-DailyMarketUpdate.htm

This TA is having a hissy fit over China's Shanghai Composite. He thinks that when it does its’ pullback it’s going to take the rest of the markets with it or something like that.

I see that CNBC is only now this morning talking briefly about it. Question is, if you had alot of profits to protect in China, how close to the exit would you be standing?

http://stocktiming.com/Thursday-DailyMarketUpdate.htm
 
China Watch - The Shanghai Composite ended last night down 3.64% !! Is it time for the parabolic rise to come crashing down?
 
China widens yuan's daily trading band
Hikes interest rate, tightens reserve requirement for banks
By Steve Goldstein & Wanfeng Zhou, MarketWatch
Last Update: 12:08 PM ET May 18, 2007



NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- The People's Bank of China on Friday said it's widening the trading band for the yuan, hiking interest rates and increasing banks' reserve requirements, as authorities act to cool the red-hot stock market and lessen pressure from disgruntled trading partners such as the United States.
The Chinese central bank said it was widening the yuan's trading band to plus or minus 0.5% per day against the U.S. dollar, as opposed to plus or minus 0.3% per day previously. China's currency has traded in a limited band against the greenback since July 2005.
The bank said it was acting to improve the managed floating exchange-rate regime based on market supply and demand. It said it was also seeking to promote development of the foreign-exchange market and strengthen the pricing and risk-management capabilities of financial institutions.
Washington welcomed the wider band as a "useful step," and urged China now to use the band to introduce more yuan flexibility, and not have it be merely a symbolic gesture.
"This is a useful step toward greater flexibility and eventual float of the currency," said Alan Holmer, the Treasury department's special envoy for China. "It's important now that Chinese authorities use the wider band and allow greater movement within each day and over time."
The central bank also lifted the bank reserve requirement ratio by a half percentage point, and it also increased its benchmark one-year lending rate by 0.18 of a percentage point, to 6.57%, and the one-year deposit rate by 0.27 of a percentage point, to 3.06%.
Ian Stannard, a currency strategist at BNP Paribas in London, said the combination of moves shows how seriously the central bank is taking concerns about overheating in the mainland's economy.
"The fact they've taken all these measures show they are now stepping up the pace of policy adjustments and tightening," he said. "It's a result of record levels of currency reserve build-up, around $131 billion in the first quarter."
"The Chinese authorities now find themselves combatting the growing asset bubbles in the Shanghai equity market and have become quite concerned about the possible fallout should it collapse," said Boris Schlossberg, senior currency strategist at DailyFX.com.
"This policy change is just the latest attempt by Chinese authorities to rein in speculative sentiment ... by slowing inflationary pressures," he said.


http://www.marketwatch.com/news/sto...x?guid={C73CF0A1-6002-4783-B883-06583C2A217D}
 
China widens yuan's daily trading band
Hikes interest rate, tightens reserve requirement for banks
By Steve Goldstein & Wanfeng Zhou, MarketWatch
Last Update: 12:08 PM ET May 18, 2007

...as authorities act to cool the red-hot stock market
Oh, oh. We saw it coming. Now how will the traders/investors react? Will the bubble finally pop?
 
Well the good news is it was posted on a Friday (our time). Time to have people mull it over. imagine if this had been posted on a Sunday (our time.)
 
Greenspan Says China Stocks May Undergo `Dramatic Contraction'

By Joao Lima and Simon Kennedy

May 23 (Bloomberg) -- Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said he was concerned Chinese stocks might undergo a ``dramatic contraction'' after its main stock index jumped more than 90 percent this year.
The benchmark CSI 300 Index, which tracks yuan-denominated A shares listed on China's two exchanges, rose to a record 3938.95 today. The index more than doubled last year as investors bet corporate profits would be boosted by the world's fastest-growing major economy.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aKAZRfGA3TT8&refer=home
 
The benchmark is a 4,000 - not 40,000. What's the big deal? There are just too many whiney investors in the market that need to be driven out - get out while you can. The bull does not want these weak knees along for the ride - the U.S. market is the most undervalued and will be fine - there is no froth.
 
The benchmark is a 4,000 - not 40,000. What's the big deal? There are just too many whiney investors in the market that need to be driven out - get out while you can. The bull does not want these weak knees along for the ride - the U.S. market is the most undervalued and will be fine - there is no froth.

Asian Macro News sector headlines
Today 10:00pm

Asian stocks update: Chinese equities ignore Greenspan's comments and regulator warnings, and JPY gives up some gains - JPY gives up some gains after Chinese equities ignore Greenspan's comments

http://www.tradethenews.com/story_details.asp?id=217433


Seems the Chinese agree with you. :D
 
China slides another 5% early Thursday but is starting to rebound some. That's over 11% in a day and a half. If it does not rebound, our market won't ignore it too long.
 
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