Markets Print edition: 2026-01-16

Chinese stocks decline for third day

Published January 16, 2026 Updated January 16, 2026 05:52am
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HONG KONG: Chinese stocks extended losses on Thursday, pausing a blistering start to the year, after regulators moved to rein in speculative trading.

The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index closed down 0.3 percent at 4,112.60, marking its third consecutive session of losses and pulling further back.

The blue-chip CSI 300 Index edged up 0.2 percent after swinging between gains and losses throughout the day.

In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng Index declined 0.3 percent to 26,923.62, and the tech index dipped 1.4 percent.

The declines have paused a stellar year-start rally, as regulators tightened margin requirements on Wednesday in a surprise move to cool a red-hot stock market that saw turnover and leverage bets hitting records.

“We may see some near-term volatility, especially in the tech- and innovation-heavy sectors where we see the most margin financing growth,” analysts at Morgan Stanley said.

However, the impact should be temporary and manageable, and regulators’ commitment to a “slow-bull” should “tame the market without causing a material impact on market liquidity,” they added.

Leading market losses on Thursday, the CSI Satellite Industry Index tumbled 7.6 percent after several commercial aerospace concept stocks warned of excessive trading risks.

The defence sector lost 3.5 percent, ranking among other major laggards,

The CSI Semiconductor Index rallied 3.7 percent and AI-related shares recouped earlier losses, after TSMC posted a record profit that blew past market forecasts and predicted more robust growth this year.

In Hong Kong, shares of Trip.com tumbled as much as 21.7 percent after regulators opened an antitrust investigation into the company.

“We are still uncertain whether this is an isolated issue but believe there is likely more government oversight on the issue, similar to its actions in the past,” said Kai Wang, a senior equity analyst at Morningstar.

He added that there could be a possibility that Trip.com could incur a hefty fine from the investigation.