China’s stock market has surged, with the CSI 300 Index up about 25% since February, despite economic headwinds such as
- weak consumer confidence,
- deflationary pressures,
- and a worsening property sector.
What’s surprising is that the rally is happening in the absence of stronger fundamentals.
Authorities in Beijing are now framing the upturn as the payoff from reforms begun 18 months ago.
- Regulators have shifted strategy since early 2024 under new leadership, pushing listed companies to pay dividends and buy back shares, lowering fees, and encouraging long-term institutional investors like insurers and pension funds to enter the market.
- At the same time, authorities have cracked down on fraud and tightened oversight to rebuild public trust.
The broader goal is what Beijing calls a “slow bull market” — steady, long-term gains that can support innovation, help households build wealth in place of a moribund property sector, and ease pressure on an underfunded pension system. Whether this rally marks the start of that vision remains uncertain, but for now, structural reforms and limited investment alternatives appear to be channeling more domestic savings into equities.
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.