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Chinese stocks rise 2% after Beijing turns off circuit breakers

CSI300 index soars 2.4% to 3371.87 points, while the Shanghai Composite gains 2.2% to 3,194.63 points

An investor points to an electronic board showing stock information as he speaks to another investor, at a brokerage house in Nanjing, Jiangsu province, China. Photo: Reuters

An investor points to an electronic board showing stock information as he speaks to another investor, at a brokerage house in Nanjing, Jiangsu province, China. Photo: Reuters

Reuters Shanghai
China's major stock indices rose more than 2% in early trade today after Beijing deactivated a circuit breaker mechanism blamed for aggravating market crashes this week.

The CSI300 index rose 2.4% to 3,371.87 points by 0127 GMT, while the Shanghai Composite Index gained 2.2% to 3,194.63 points.

Meanwhile, the Hang Seng index in Hong Kong was up 0.8% at 20,491.88 points.

Chinese markets have been rattled by a confluence of negative events, including weak economic data, concerns about pending share sales by major stakeholders and the central bank's recent sharp depreciation of the yuan currency.

The circuit breaker, designed to put a floor under volatile shifts in sentiment and protect investors, was blamed by some market watchers for inadvertently aggravating anxiety and accelerating the selloff.
 
The CSI300 has slumped around 12% so far in 2016, giving up all the gains earned in 2015 and roiling global financial markets.

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First Published: Jan 08 2016 | 7:07 AM IST

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