China dethroned by Japan as world’s second-biggest stock market
China just lost its ranking as the world鈥檚 number two stock market.
After a Thursday slump, Chinese equities were worth $6.09 trillion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That compares with $6.17 trillion in Japan. The U.S. has the world鈥檚 largest stock market at just over $31 trillion.
China鈥檚 stock market overtook Japan鈥檚 in late 2014, then soared to an all-time high of more than $10 trillion in June 2015. Chinese equities and the nation鈥檚 currency have taken a beating this year amid a trade spat with the U.S., a government-led campaign to cut debt and a slowing economy.
“Losing the ranking to Japan is the damage caused by the trade war,” said Banny Lam, head of research at CEB International Investment Corp. in Hong Kong. “The Japan equity gauge is relatively more stable around the current level but China鈥檚 market cap has slumped from its peak this year.”
The Shanghai Composite Index has lost more than 16 percent in 2018 to be among the world鈥檚 worst performers. Industrial and tech stocks have been among China鈥檚 worst performers, with those subgauges on the CSI 300 Index of large caps sliding more than 20 percent this year.
China鈥檚 Politburo, a body comprising the Communist Party鈥檚 25 most senior leaders, signaled on Tuesday that policy makers will focus more on supporting economic growth amid risks from the deleveraging campaign and the trade standoff. Still, the Shanghai Composite Index is headed for its worst week in more than a month.
“The market will likely continue to hover at low levels for the next couple of months,” said Linus Yip, Hong Kong-based strategist with First Shanghai Securities Ltd. “But there鈥檚 still a chance that China鈥檚 stock market will recover with total capitalization ascending to the world鈥檚 No. 2 place again. After all, the economic fundamentals are still stable and growth momentum will resume after a short-term downturn.”
Global Role
Losing the number two spot is a reminder that China鈥檚 role in global financial markets — while large — still doesn鈥檛 match its economic might. Policy makers have pledged to open areas such as investment limits on industries from banking to agriculture, but foreign ownership of equities and bonds remains low. The yuan鈥檚 share of global payments fell to 1.81 percent in June from 1.88 percent a month earlier, according to data from the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication.
While Japan鈥檚 benchmark Topix index has declined about 4 percent this year, it remains one of the better-performing markets in Asia amid support from the Bank of Japan鈥檚 ETF purchases and as most companies continue to report robust earnings growth. Almost 60 percent of firms on the gauge that have reported in the current earnings season have beat analyst expectations.
The yuan has weakened more than 8 percent against the dollar in the past six months, and there are few signs the nation鈥檚 central bank has been intervening in the currency market. China鈥檚 currency is in line for an eighth weekly retreat, the longest run since the start of the country鈥檚 modern foreign-exchange rate regime in 1994. The onshore yuan was down 0.47 percent at 6.8705 versus the greenback as of 1:15 p.m. in Shanghai.
The yuan鈥檚 tumble has prompted forecasters to lower their estimates for the exchange rate. Deutsche Bank AG was among the latest to do so, cutting its year-end prediction to 6.95 per dollar from 6.8 on Wednesday, saying trade tensions will likely put persistent pressure on China鈥檚 current account in the next few years.
The market value calculations include primary listings only, to avoid double-counting. Hong Kong鈥檚 equities are valued at $5.1 trillion. — Bloomberg


