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Shanghai index extends loss on liquidity concern
SHANGHAI'S key stock index extended yesterday's declines in the morning session on tight liquidity.
The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index was down 0.68 percent to 2,755.79. Turnover was 50.9 billion yuan (US$7.8 billion).
The drop of the gauge was amid weak performances of overseas stock markets overnight on concerns about European debt crises and a slowdown of China's economic growth.
New York's Dow Jones Average shed 1.05 percent, while London FTSE 100 lost 1.89 percent.
Domestically, liquidity tightens before companies make their tax payments by the end of May. The seven-day repurchase rate, an indication of borrowing cost among banks, rose for the fourth day to a one week high of 4.73 percent, according to the National Interbank Funding Center.
China's central bank issued 6 billion yuan worth of one-year bills yesterday, 60 percent less than the previous week as demand fell amid tight liquidity.
Metal producers led the decliners as metal prices were weighed by concerns for economic conditions in China and Europe.
"The base metals complex has started the weak under heavy pressure with the combination of a stronger dollar, weaker Chinese equity markets and a fall in Chinese manufacturing growth," the Standard Bank wrote in a report. "Fears over the European debt crisis have also resurfaced, triggering a fresh round of risk aversion."
Yunnan Copper Co slid 2.7 percent to 21.28 yuan. China Aluminum Corp went down 1 percent to 9.82 yuan.
Gold miners gained because of inflation worries. Shandong Gold Mining Co rose 1 percent to 44.98 yuan. Zijin Mining Co edged up 0.6 percent to 7.04 yuan.
The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index was down 0.68 percent to 2,755.79. Turnover was 50.9 billion yuan (US$7.8 billion).
The drop of the gauge was amid weak performances of overseas stock markets overnight on concerns about European debt crises and a slowdown of China's economic growth.
New York's Dow Jones Average shed 1.05 percent, while London FTSE 100 lost 1.89 percent.
Domestically, liquidity tightens before companies make their tax payments by the end of May. The seven-day repurchase rate, an indication of borrowing cost among banks, rose for the fourth day to a one week high of 4.73 percent, according to the National Interbank Funding Center.
China's central bank issued 6 billion yuan worth of one-year bills yesterday, 60 percent less than the previous week as demand fell amid tight liquidity.
Metal producers led the decliners as metal prices were weighed by concerns for economic conditions in China and Europe.
"The base metals complex has started the weak under heavy pressure with the combination of a stronger dollar, weaker Chinese equity markets and a fall in Chinese manufacturing growth," the Standard Bank wrote in a report. "Fears over the European debt crisis have also resurfaced, triggering a fresh round of risk aversion."
Yunnan Copper Co slid 2.7 percent to 21.28 yuan. China Aluminum Corp went down 1 percent to 9.82 yuan.
Gold miners gained because of inflation worries. Shandong Gold Mining Co rose 1 percent to 44.98 yuan. Zijin Mining Co edged up 0.6 percent to 7.04 yuan.
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