China stocks end week lower; continued policy support curb losses

The blue-chip CSI300 index fell 0.9 per cent to 3,796.97, while the Shanghai Composite Index dropped 1.1 per cent to 2,808.53.

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For the week, both SSEC and CSI300 shed 1.1 per cent each, but narrower than the 1.7 per cent fall of MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan.
SHANGHAI: Chinese shares fell on Friday and ended the week lower amid lingering coronavirus worries, but losses were limited as Beijing pledged more support to shore up the world's second- largest economy.

The blue-chip CSI300 index fell 0.9 per cent to 3,796.97, while the Shanghai Composite Index dropped 1.1 per cent to 2,808.53.

For the week, both SSEC and CSI300 shed 1.1 per cent each, but narrower than the 1.7 per cent fall of MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan.


China's central bank cut the interest rate on its targeted medium-term lending facility (TMLF) on Friday, following similar reductions to borrowing costs on other liquidity tools in the past few weeks to support the economy.

"The role of TMLF as a low-cost alternative to MLF is diminishing, as there are various measures providing cheaper funding already," said Frances Cheung, head of Asia macro strategy at Westpac in Singapore.

Friday's decline was in line with other Asian markets, spurred by doubts about progress in developing drugs to treat COVID-19 and new evidence of U.S. economic damage caused by the coronavirus pandemic.
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U.S. business activity plumbed record lows in April, mirroring dire figures from Europe and Asia as strict stay-at-home orders crushed production, supply chains and consumer spending, a survey showed.

Bucking the broad retreat on Friday, China's new energy vehicle-related shares climbed as Beijing planned to extend subsidies for buying NEVs.

China is stepping up measures to boost domestic demand, including the latest NEV subsidy extension plan, Everbright Securities noted in report.

Long-term value investors could gradually buy stocks now, as A-shares' valuations are relatively low, the brokerage added.
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Mainland China reported 6 new coronavirus cases as of end-April 23, down from 10 reported a day earlier, putting the total number of COVID-19 infections at 82,804.
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