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China moves to boost languishing markets by ordering funds to invest more in shares

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BANGKOK (AP) — The Chinese government is trying to encourage people to spend more by ensuring that share prices will rise, ordering pensions and mutual funds to invest more in domestic stocks to help jolt its languid markets out of the doldrums.

Officials told reporters in Beijing on Thursday that beginning this year mutual funds should increase holdings of onshore stocks, called A-shares, by at least 10% a year over the next three years.

Commercial insurance funds will have to put 30% of their annual new premium revenue into share markets beginning this year, they said.

“This means that at least several hundred billion yuan of long-term funds will be added to A-shares every year,” said Wu Qing, chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission.

The announcement followed a meeting of top financial officials including ministries in charge of pensions and the central bank.

“Implementing the plan’s various measures will further enhance the equity allocation capacity of medium- and long-term funds, steadily expand the scale of investment, improve the supply and structure of funds in the capital market, and consolidate good conditions for the capital market’s recovery,” Wu said.

The ruling Communist Party announced this move just ahead of China’s biggest holiday of the year, the Lunar New Year, which begins on Wednesday, Jan. 29. It’s a time when families tend to splash out on food and travel and little red packets of money for children and young adults, a time of wishes for good fortune.

Markets in Hong Kong and Shanghai rose early Thursday after the announcement but then shed those gains. The Shanghai Composite index closed 0.5% higher while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index fell 0.4%.

China’s share markets are huge but they hit their peak value before the 2008 global financial crisis and have meandered well below that level since. A lack of gains in share prices, along with falling housing prices, has discouraged Chinese families from spending, slowing consumer demand and economic growth.

Less than 5% of household wealth in China is held in equities, compared with nearly 30% of household wealth in the United States. Chinese markets, which were set up in the early 1990s, have tended to serve as fundraising vehicles for state-run companies that have launched massive share offerings but remain under control of the ruling Communist Party.

So far, the government’s efforts to get people to spend more and save less have had mixed success. An initiative to promote purchases of energy efficient vehicles and appliances by paying subsidies to people who turn in their old versions of such items has boosted sales of such products. But share prices had traded stubbornly within a narrow range after a brief-lived rally late last year.

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