Hong Kong Stocks down in cautious trade

Capital Market 

Top-ranking policymaking bodies including the Politburo, the State Council, the central and the have all held meetings in the last two weeks.

should fine-tune monetary policy in a pre-emptive way based on economic growth and price changes, according to a top-level meeting reports chaired by Monetary policy needs to be neither too tight, nor too loose and should be fine-tuned in a timely and pre-emptive way based on economic growth and changes in price situations, the said. The meeting pointed out that it is necessary to strengthen regulation of countercyclical macro policy and strive to put tax cuts and fee reduction in place as soon as possible.

Meeting of the Politburo was interpreted by traders as meaning the economy is on a stable enough footing that extended support isn't needed.

People have come to a clear consensus that there won't be any aggressive stimulus that floods the economy with excessive liquidity. The central last week gave a signal that supply of cash would be less liberal, when it rolled over only half of the funds coming due through one of its longer-term policy tools, instead offering more seven-day money.

Shares of materials companies declined, with copper-exposed stocks on weak copper prices after weak US property market data and a top party decision-making meeting in China last Friday that appeared to suggest Beijing's focus has been shifted back to structural de-leveraging and prevention of property speculation. MMG (1208 HK), the overseas mining unit of state-owned metals trading giant and a major copper producer, sank 9.6% to HK$3.5, while (358 HK), China's largest smelter of the metal, slid 3.2% to HK$10.84.

HK-listed properties stocks closed down after Chinese government's anti-speculation commentary. China (688 HK) dropped 2%, to HK$28.15, and (2007 HK) lost 3% to HK$12.54. (01918) plunged 4.9% to HK$39.7. (00813) sank 4.3% to HK$23.2. (02202) 4.3% to HK$30.9. (03383) fell 4% to HK$11.98.

declined on US decision to stop waiving sanctions on buyers of Aviation is the largest operating cost for airlines. prices jumped more than 2% on Monday on growing concern about tight global supplies after the announced a further clampdown on Iranian said it would eliminate in May all waivers allowing eight economies to buy Iranian oil without facing US sanctions. (1055), the country's largest carrier by fleet, fell 7.4% to HK$6.86. (753), the country's flag carrier, fell 7% to HK$9.33.

Shares of (3993 HK), the nation's largest of the steel-smelting ingredient, plunged 6.3% at HK$3.15, after estimated its net profit dropped 77.4 to 83.9% year-on-year in the three months to March 31, to between 250 million yuan and 350 million yuan..

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First Published: Tue, April 23 2019. 13:34 IST