China’s Stock Euphoria Cools as Traders Reassess Stimulus Bets

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(Bloomberg) -- Chinese stocks began Tuesday’s session with a bang — an onshore benchmark surged 11% as soon as trading resumed after a weeklong break. But the enthusiasm faded as the day progressed, with the lack of more major stimulus from a key policy meeting disappointing investors.

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In the end, the CSI 300 Index finished just 5.9% higher. In Hong Kong, a gauge of Chinese shares was down more than 10%, on course to erase almost all of the gains made while onshore markets were shut for the Golden Week.

Anticipation for an opening pop had been building given the rally in Hong Kong-listed shares, reports of record account openings at major Chinese brokerages in preparation for Tuesday’s session and hopes that the press briefing by the nation’s top economic planning agency will offer more positive catalysts.

“The meeting underwhelmed our modest expectations and seemingly those of investors,” Michael Hirson and Houze Song of 22V Research LLC wrote in a note. “While Beijing is keen to revive equities, it does not feel compelled to abandon financial restraint to aggressively stimulate the real economy.”

The CSI 300 Index had risen for nine straight sessions through Sept. 30 before the Golden Week break, boosted by a stimulus blitz that included interest-rate cuts, freeing-up of cash for banks and support for stocks. That saw Wall Street heavyweights including Goldman Sachs Group Inc., HSBC Holdings Plc and BlackRock Inc. upgrading the once-beaten down stock market amid bets of further stimulus.

Tuesday’s rally helped the onshore gauge close at the highest level since July 2022, and some market watchers are already cautioning against stocks reaching overvalued levels. The index is trading at 13.3 times one-year forward earnings versus a five-year median of 11.9 times.

An overheating of the A-share market and the Chinese government’s delivery on its recently-announced policy stimulus are among the risks investors should watch amid the Chinese stock market rally, Morgan Stanley strategists including Laura Wang in Hong Kong wrote in a research note. That adds to the skepticism shown earlier by some other strategists and fund managers who said they are waiting for Beijing to back up its stimulus pledges with real money.