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Asia-Pacific Stocks Face Headwinds as Chinese Bourse Tests 3,800 Support Level
Chinese equities are extending their recent downtrend, with weakness mounting across multiple sessions. The Shanghai Composite has dipped below 3,825, putting the psychological 3,800 support level in focus for the day ahead. Wednesday’s open is likely to follow suit with bearish momentum, though technology sector strength may provide some floor for the decline.
The broader Asian market landscape reflects divergent signals from overnight trading. European bourses struggled with soft performance, while U.S. indices showed mixed results with marginal changes. This mosaic of sentiment suggests Asian exchanges will likely navigate between weakness and modest support.
Shanghai and Shenzhen Indices Under Pressure
The Shanghai Composite Index shed 43.11 points, representing a 1.11 percent pullback to close at 3,824.81, having ranged between 3,815.84 and 3,862.43 throughout the session. The Shenzhen Composite fared worse, dropping 36.80 points or 1.50 percent to settle at 2,417.61.
Financial and commodity-linked stocks bore the brunt of selling pressure, though some property names attracted contrarian buying. The two-session decline now totals approximately 65 points or 1.7 percent, narrowing the margin to the critical 3,800 support threshold.
Sector-Specific Weakness Across Banking and Energy
Major financial institutions led the losses. Industrial and Commercial Bank of China declined 0.26 percent, Bank of China retreated 0.36 percent, while Agricultural Bank of China posted a more significant 1.60 percent drop. China Merchants Bank eased 0.24 percent and Bank of Communications fell 0.82 percent. Insurance plays weren’t spared, with China Life Insurance tumbling 1.78 percent.
Commodity stocks also faced headwinds. Jiangxi Copper contracted 1.46 percent, Aluminum Corp of China plunged 2.47 percent, and Yankuang Energy skidded 1.06 percent. Energy shares exhibited divergence—PetroChina added 0.63 percent and Sinopec rose 0.34 percent, while Huaneng Power stumbled 1.77 percent and China Shenhua Energy gained 0.65 percent.
The property sector showed resilience with bargain-hunting interest. Gemdale surged 1.61 percent, Poly Developments edged up 0.16 percent, and China Vanke rallied 2.05 percent, providing a counterweight to the prevailing selloff.
Wall Street’s Struggle Sends Mixed Global Signals
Overnight trading on U.S. exchanges yielded cautious results. The Dow Jones tumbled 302.30 points or 0.62 percent to 48,114.26, while the S&P 500 slipped 16.25 points or 0.24 percent to end at 6,800.26. The NASDAQ managed modest gains of 54.05 points or 0.23 percent to close at 23,111.46, the lone bright spot among major benchmarks.
This tepid performance followed the November employment report from the Labor Department, which sparked debate about recession risks despite signaling potential for continued Federal Reserve rate cuts. Retail sales data from the Commerce Department showed essentially flat October performance, adding to growth concerns.
Energy Markets Retreat on Supply Oversupply
Crude oil extended its recent decline amid persistent supply glut anxieties. Potential peace resolution between Russia and Ukraine could further complicate the oversupply picture. West Texas Intermediate crude for January delivery fell $1.57 or 2.8 percent to trade at $55.25 per barrel, reflecting the broader risk-off sentiment across commodities.
The convergence of these factors suggests the Shanghai Composite’s test of 3,800 support will depend on whether technology sector strength can arrest broader market momentum or if global macro headwinds prove too formidable to overcome.