Stocks Fell As Investors Reacted to China’s Inflation Data

Stocks on Monday

Stocks Fell As Investors Reacted to China’s Inflation Data 

Chinese stocks suffered serious losses on Monday as investors reacted to China’s inflation data for March and monitored the pandemic on the mainland. 

Mainland Chinese stocks and Hong Kong stocks have been tumbling all day, but losses deepened by Monday’s market close. 

The CSI 300 index, which tracks the largest mainland-listed stocks, dropped 3.04% to 4,100.07. The Shanghai composite fell 2.61% to close at 3,167.13. On Monday, the Shenzhen component dropped 3.671 to end its trading day at 11,520.21. 

In Hong Hang, the Hang Seng index fell 3,03% to 21,208.30. Hong Kong-listed shares of Nio declined 11.44%. Nio’s shares fell after it announced a suspension in production due to disruptions at its supply chain partners as a result of the Covid outbreak.

The country’s producer inflation for March was higher than expected. Importantly, the producer price index jumped 8.3% as compared with a year ago, official data showed on Monday.

Chinese consumer inflation also surpassed expectations in March, with the consumer price index climbing 1.5% year-on-year. 

The data release comes as the world’s largest economy is trying to cope with its worst wave of Covid since the beginning of the pandemic in early 2020. For example, Shanghai reported a record high combined number of cases for Sunday, 914 with symptoms and 25,173 without.

Japanese stocks on Monday

In Japan, the Nikkei 225 declined 0.61% to finish its trading day at 26,821.52. The Topix fell 0.38% to close at 1,889.64.

South Korea’s Kospi dropped 0.27% to 2,693.10. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 defied the overall trend regionally as it climbed 0.1% to close at 7,485.20. 

In Southeast Asia, shares of tech firm GoTo jumped around 13%. GoTo’s shares rose 13% from their issue price as they made their debut in Indonesia. The broader Jakarta Composite, on the contrary, shed earlier gains as it fell 0.1% to 7,203.79.

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