PMI pushes mainland stocks lower
SCI falls 1.8%, extending annual loss to 24% ahead of disappointing company earnings
Mainland stocks extended the steepest monthly sell-off since the global financial crisis after an official factory gauge slumped to a three-year low, some of the nation's largest companies warned of disappointing earnings and traders unwound margin debt.
The Shanghai Composite Index slid 1.8 percent to 2,688.85 at the close, extending its loss this year to 24 percent. PetroChina Co, which has the biggest weighting on the benchmark gauge, dropped after saying annual net income probably fell as much as 70 percent. Leveraged bets on Chinese stock exchanges fell for a record 21st day on Friday to the lowest level since last year's rout.
The Shanghai index has tumbled the most among global benchmark indexes this year amid concern the economic slowdown and the weakest currency in five years will accelerate record capital outflows. The purchasing managers index dropped to 49.4 in January, a record sixth straight month of deterioration.
Most short-term money-market rates fell to their lowest levels in at least a week as the central bank pumped cash into the financial system before a weeklong holiday begins on Feb 8.
"The headline number is a disappointment to the market as output and new orders show no signs of a rebound," said William Wong, head of sales trading at Shenwan Hongyuan Group Co in Hong Kong. "Trading this week will remain shallow ahead of the Chinese Lunar New Year holiday."
The CSI 300 Index fell 1.5 percent. The Hang Seng Chinese Enterprises Index dropped 1.17 percent in Hong Kong at the close, while the Hang Seng Index retreated for the first time in four days, losing 0.45 percent.
The official manufacturing gauge's six months below 50 is the longest stretch of readings below that level in NBS data since the start of 2005.
The PMI slumped last month because of weak demand and efforts to reduce overcapacity, the National Bureau of Statistics said in a statement on Monday.
"Operating conditions continue to deteriorate at a modest pace, while output and employment both contract at faster rates," said Andrew Sullivan, managing director for sales trading at Haitong International Securities Group in Hong Kong.
A gauge of energy companies in the CSI 300 tumbled 2.8 percent for the biggest loss among 10 industry groups. PetroChina, which cited weaker energy prices for the estimated drop in full-year earnings, also dropped 2.8 percent.
China Life, the sixth-biggest weighted stock on the Shanghai Composite, plunged 3.1 percent after the largest Chinese insurer said last year's net income may have risen as much as 10 percent from 32.2 billion yuan ($4.89 billion) in 2014. That compares with the average profit estimate of 43.5 billion yuan based on 22 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.