China's Stocks Post Record Drop; Extend Rout Past $350 Billion
By Zhang Shidong
June 4 (Bloomberg) -- China's key stock index plunged by a record number of points after the government's main securities daily signaled officials won't try to halt a slump that's erased more than $350 billion of market value in four days.
The CSI 300 Index dropped 292.52, or 7.7 percent, to close at 3511.43. The measure, which doubled in the past six months, has plunged 16 percent from its May 29 peak after the government tripled the tax on share trades to 0.3 percent.
The speed that stock prices soared by was ``extremely unusual'' and highlighted ``structural bubbles'' in the market, the state-owned China Securities Journal wrote in an editorial.
More than half of the stocks included in the CSI 300 plunged by the 10 percent daily limit, including Huaneng Power International Inc., the nation's largest electricity producer, and Air China Ltd., the biggest international carrier.
``There's panic selling,'' said Yan Ji, an investment manager at HSBC Jintrust Fund Management Co. in Shanghai, which manages about $517 million. ``Investors are convinced the government won't do anything to support the market.''
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