Crash In Hong Kong Shows ‘Mr. Market’ Clueless On Xi
Chinese assets and, perhaps more aptly, the people who trade them, weren’t amused with Xi
Chinese assets and, perhaps more aptly, the people who trade them, weren’t amused with Xi
“We should just close this market,” Bloomberg TV’s David Ingles sighed, just before the start
Hong Kong shares succumbed to outright panic on Monday amid a bevy of concerns ranging
It was an inauspicious start to 2022 in Hong Kong, where shares fell on the
Meanwhile, in Hong Kong. Stand News, a pro-democracy holdout, became the latest casualty of Xi’s
The Hang Seng fell into a bear market Friday amid another steep decline in Chinese
Cold War 2.0 was the narrative du jour on Friday. As tipped several days previous,
When authorities in Beijing blindsided markets by cracking down on Didi just days after the
Last week, I whispered about a “global tech bear market.” The poster child, I noted,
China got back to business Thursday following the Lunar New Year holiday. Mainland shares were
The froth in Hong Kong came off fairly dramatically Tuesday, as the Hang Seng tumbled
Risk sentiment was generally muted to start a week that will feature key economic data
“We are looking at numerous different things”.
“He kept a bag with clothes and a toothbrush hanging on his front door so he would be ready for this”.
“Risks the US refuses to accept”…
“This new law can simply mean anything Beijing wants it to mean”.
“China’s coverup allowed [COVID-19] to spread all over the world”.
“…a critical flaw of the deal emerges”.
“Facts on the ground”.
“We’ll see an HBO special about it ten or 15 years from now”.
Wang also cautioned that anyone who expects Beijing to pay “reparations” for the virus is “daydreaming”.
“It’s maybe cursed.”
This is the end, my only friend, the end.
“The market is taking this news negatively”.
“We are deep into recession.”
“We took a hit yesterday”.
It is, in a word, unfortunate.
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