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China's top developer China Vanke (SZA: 000002), based in the bustling southern city of Shenzhen (pictured above), lost 2.9% today to 8.75 yuan on pricier credit.  Photo: Andrew Vanburen

CHINA' S SHANGHAI Composite, the benchmark tracker of A shares and B shares, closed down 1.9% today at 2,781.40 following a long-anticipated rate hike over the weekend.

China’s central bank hiked lending and deposit rates by 0.25% to 5.81% and 2.75%, respectively, which had no downside effect on morning trade as the move was expected but profit-taking took over with a vengeance after lunch.

Meanwhile, Hong Kong’s stock market was closed today for the Christmas holiday.

China’s benchmark Index lost its hold over 2,800 points shortly after the mid-day break on a day characterized by light trade following the holiday weekend with trading turnover of 123.4 bln yuan.

The People’s Bank of China, the country’s central bank, raised rates to help combat strong CPI growth and especially help temper overinvestment and speculative activity in the country’s runaway real estate sector.

However, given the steady rise in Chinese shares in the morning session today, analysts said that the interest rate hikes were long-anticipated and investors had likely factored in the move long in advance.

Others said the scale of the hike was smaller than expected and the move later than anticipated, according to a Chinese language piece in SinaFinance.

However, this relative under-reaction to the rate action did not spare some of the most vulnerable sectors to tighter credit.

 

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Indigestion: China's Shanghai Composite Index, which is flirting with double-digit year-on-year lows, digested news of higher interest rates fine until lunch came along.



China’s property developers were some of the hardest hit counters today as the industry’s lifeblood is dependent on a steady availability of affordable capital.

 

China Vanke (SZA: 000002), the country’s largest listed property developer, lost 2.89% today to 8.75 yuan.

The country’s lenders were naturally down on the latest credit-tightening move.

Bank of Communications (SHA: 601328) led the downward charge, shedding 1.94% today to finish at 5.55 yuan, while Shanghai Pudong Development Bank Co Ltd (SHA: 600000) lost 1.81% to 12.51.

Other major lenders finishing in negative territory included China Merchants Bank (SHA: 600036) which fell 1.74% to 13.00 yuan, China Construction Bank Corporation (SHA: 601939) was down 1.28% at 4.63, China Minsheng Banking Corporation Ltd (SHA: 600016) lost 0.78% to 5.06 and Bank of China (SHA: 601988) dropped by 0.31% to 3.23.

Other financial sector firms were not immune from the credit crunch including heavyweight insurer China Life (SHA: 601628) which fell by 1.21% to 21.98 yuan.

See earlier:

KOREA JITTERS Weighing On China Shares, But New Funds Offer Hope

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