US investment bank Goldman Sachs has estimated the Chinese government has spent up to 900 billion yuan ($147 billion) in two months to try to prop stock prices and halt a market rout.
After the Shanghai market peaked in mid-June and then fell 30 per cent in three weeks, the government intervened with a rescue package that included funding the state-backed China Securities Finance Corp (CSF) to buy stock.
Goldman said the government spent 860-900 billion yuan to support the market in June and July, according to a research report issued on Wednesday.
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Bloomberg News on Thursday reported that the CSF — previously a largely unknown institution that helped provide financing to brokerages — was seeking an additional two trillion yuan, which would bring its total market support funds to five trillion yuan.
Worries that the government is preparing to exit the market, despite repeated denials, were the trigger for the biggest one-day fall in eight years of 8.48 per cent last month.
But Goldman said fears of an imminent exit by the “national team” — as the media and market regulator have dubbed the players supporting the market on behalf of the government — are overdone.
“The probability of a rash exit is low, as the market has not yet stabilised and the government has no pressing need for the funds,” the report said.
It forecast the benchmark Shanghai index would trade in a range from the mid-3,000 point level but would be capped at 4,500 points.
On Thursday, the Shanghai Composite Index closed down 0.89 per cent at 3,661.54. It is now down around 29 per cent since its peak closing on June 12, nearly the level that sparked the initial government intervention.
Other analysts have said they expect the market to test support at 3,500 points and possibly at the 3,200 level in volatile trading.
Goldman said the government has picked up heavyweight blue-chip stocks in banking, insurance, food and beverage, and health care.