China hurries to shore up sliding yuan and stock markets
FILE PHOTO: An investor looks at an electronic board showing stock information in Beijing · Reuters

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By Samuel Shen and Summer Zhen

SHANGHAI/HONG KONG (Reuters) -China's stock exchanges and central bank rushed to defend a tumbling yuan and falling stock markets on Monday, trying to soothe investors concerned about Donald Trump's return to the White House and Beijing's ability to revive the economy.

With two weeks before Trump begins a second U.S. presidency, his threats of big tariffs on Chinese imports have rattled the yuan, driven mainland bond yields down and got stocks off to a rough start to 2025.

On Monday, China's tightly controlled yuan weakened to its lowest in 16 months while the blue-chip stock index touched its weakest since the end of September, slipping as much as 0.9% on the day before closing down 0.2%. The index fell 5% last week to clock its biggest weekly loss in more than two years.

China's stock exchanges asked large mutual funds to restrict their selling of stocks at the beginning of the year, three sources familiar with the matter told Reuters, underscoring the jittery mood in the market.

At least four large mutual funds received calls from the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges on Dec. 31 and Jan. 2 and 3, asking them to ensure they bought more stocks than they sold each day, the sources said.

The Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges recently met with foreign institutions, both bourses said on Sunday, assuring investors they would continue to open up China's capital markets.

The People's Bank of China could issue more yuan bills in Hong Kong in January, state-owned news outlet Yicai reported on Monday, in a sign authorities want to absorb currency to dampen speculation. Financial News, a central bank publication, said the PBOC has the tools and the experience to react to yuan depreciation.

"Preventing a sharp decline of the yuan will be crucial for China's recovery," said Charu Chanana, chief investment strategist at Saxo. "Any tactical recovery this year will need more than just stimulus measures, particularly whether China can negotiate a deal with President-elect Trump."

The world's second-biggest economy has struggled over the past few years as a property downturn and slowing income sapped consumer demand and hurt businesses. Exports were one of the few bright spots, but could face hefty U.S. tariffs under a second Trump administration.

The S&P 500 has risen 4% while China's CSI300 index has dropped 4.3% since the U.S. election in early November, highlighting the worries around tariffs. European stocks are flat in the same period.