Traders who may have napped through the earlier oil slide below $28 finally woke up just in time for the China open to find that while there was little excitement on the currency front following a Yuan fixing, which at 6.5578 was practially unchanged from yesterday's midpoint of 6.5596...
...the Shanghai composite - following yesterday's torrid, manipulated last hour surge - opened 0.5% lower, sliding back below the 3,000 level which was breached last week for the first time since last summer.
More troubling for China's market manipulators is that they will very quickly and aggressively need to get involved today if they wish to prop up the market, now that the animal spirits are officially gone.
Below is a chart of the Chinese stock market "animal spirits" leaving the building.
According to Bloomberg, the outstanding balance of Shanghai margin debt dropped for 13th consecutive day on Tuesday, the longest since July 9. Balance fell 0.1%, or 610m yuan, to 583.4b yuan or the lowest level since October 9. This was the longest losing streak in 6 months as the public now leave the market bubble in droves.
Elsewhere in related securities, while the onshore Yuan is peaceful, there was less peace for its offshore cousin, where the USD/CNH 12-month forwards tumbled following selling by Asia-based leveraged accounts, and trigger stop-losses through the 2,900 area. PBOC intervention time? Perhaps, but it's early.
Also troubling was the Bloomberg note that after the PBOC broke the Hong Kong interbank market by crushing all available FX liquidity in order to manipulate the CNH higher, now the offshore spillover appears to have spilled right back into China as follows:
- CHINA'S OVERNIGHT REPURCHASE RATE JUMPS TO NINE-MONTH HIGH
At this point it is practically impossible to track all the Chinese market breakages, which like connected vessels appear at the most random of places, and the moment one hole is patched up, another immediately takes its place.
Finally, for those interested in the Hong Kong market, the Hang Seng Index slid 1.6% to 19,325.56 at the open, resuming declines after snapping a three-day losing streak yday, with losses led by energy companies such as Sinopec -3.6% and PetroChina -3.3% which were among the biggest drops on HSI.