Finance and economics | Fanning the flames

China’s stockmarket nightmare is nowhere near over

The situation ought to worry Xi Jinping

Illustration of a paper fan that continues round into a downward arrow
Illustration: Álvaro Bernis
|Shanghai

Running China’s securities watchdog is a perilous job. A market rout can end your career, or worse. On February 7th, after weeks of stockmarket instability, Yi Huiman, the head of the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), was suddenly fired and replaced. He is not the first official to fall after a period of plummeting stock prices. Liu Shiyu, his predecessor, was sacked in 2019, and later investigated for corruption. Xiao Gang, the boss before that, was treated as a scapegoat for the market crash in 2015.

Before his dismissal, Mr Yi would have been aware that he was on dangerous ground. Already this year, more than $1trn in market value has been wiped from exchanges in China and Hong Kong. On February 5th the Shanghai Composite plummeted to a five-year low. All told, the index is down by more than a fifth since early 2022. And as miserable as the performance of Chinese stocks has been for most of their three-decade history, the present downturn feels different.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline "Fanning the flames"

Who is in control? Xi v the markets

From the February 10th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Finance and economics

How Ukrainians are using the cover of war to escape taxes

“Black grain” infuriates exporters playing by the rules

What campus protesters get wrong about divestment

Will withdrawing money hurt Israel?


Hedge funds make billions as India’s options market goes ballistic

The country’s retail investors are doing less well