Tao Wang News
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China’s stocks rose the most in three months after the government allowed insurers to invest more in banks and investors speculated profits at construction and cement companies will increase.
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Chinese stock investors emptied trading accounts at the fastest pace in 16 months last week, three days before the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index rallied the most in three months.
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Niu Dianqing stopped his motorbike at a construction site in China’s Inner Mongolia one morning last month. The front door was locked.
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Yuan forwards are trading at the biggest discount to the spot rate in four years on bets a three- month appreciation in China’s currency will reverse following next week’s U.S. elections.
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Tao Wang, a Hong Kong-based economist at UBS AG, comments on China’s second interest-rate cut in a month.
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China’s economy probably slowed and the inflation rate climbed back to above 3 percent in July, according to UBS AG.
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China’s stocks fell, dragging the benchmark index down by the most in a week, on concern proposed rules for banks may curb credit growth and speculation intensified the government won’t loosen property restrictions.
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Chinese Vice Premier Li Keqiang said measures introduced to control the nation’s property market are at a “critical stage” and that the government should maintain the curbs, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.
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China’s stocks rose, sending the benchmark index to its biggest advance in a week, as developers and industrial companies gained on the central bank’s second interest-rate cut in a month, overshadowing losses by banks.
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China’s stocks rose, extending gains for the benchmark index to 11 percent from this year’s low, as a jump in industrial profits and the prospects for increased spending and tourism boosted the domestic economic outlook.
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