HomeNewsOpinionFinally, there’s more money than fools in China

Finally, there’s more money than fools in China

The Chinese have been hoarding cash since the pandemic. But this behaviour had started as early as 2018. Their preference for buying investment products, such as stocks, bonds and trusts, has been on a steady decline since the 2015 stock market crash

September 28, 2023 / 09:24 IST
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China banks
Changing sentiments in China, as consumers’ savings data and the central bank’s quarterly urban survey. People keep on putting money into banks even as the People’s Bank of China cuts deposit rates. (Source: Bloomberg)

For years, China’s netizens joked that the country was home to millions of fools with a lot of money. They were called “chives,” a healthy crop that can flourish soon after harvesting, and keep coming up again and again.

This characterisation was not entirely unjustified. After all, China’s fervent day traders did propel the stock market to dare-devil levels in 2015. The equally spectacular crash did not seem to leave long-lasting trauma. A few years later, the optimistic rekindled their spirits, raining down billions of dollars onto whatever was trendy, from star managers’ new funds to apple futures.

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That audacity has evaporated, however. Three decades after the opening of the Shanghai Stock Exchange, the Chinese have become hard-nosed investors. They no longer want to be the fools catching the falling knives.

For evidence of that changing sentiment, look no further than consumers’ savings data and the central bank’s quarterly urban survey. As of August, household deposits totaled a record 132 trillion yuan ($18 trillion), blowing pastChina’s entire gross domestic product last year. People keep on putting money into banks even as the People’s Bank of China cuts deposit rates.