China's stock markets tanked on Monday, their first day of trading after an extended Lunar New Year holiday, with nearly 3,500 stocks dropping by the daily 10 percent limit.
The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index closed 7.7 percent lower, the biggest drop in nearly five years. The Shenzhen Composite Index, which tracks the performance of 500 major stocks listed on the exchange, dived 8.4 percent. Shenzhen hasn't recorded a single-day percentage drop this bad since 2007.
The losses on each index were the biggest since the 2015 'Black Monday,' wiping out a combined $445 billion off the market.
The Chinese currency, the yuan, has weakened by nearly 1.5 percent to around 7.00 to the US dollar.
Also on rt.com China’s central bank pumps $173bn into economy to heal damage from coronavirus outbreakChina's markets last traded on January 23, the day Wuhan, the epicenter of the China coronavirus outbreak, was put on lockdown as the country reported over 800 confirmed infections and 25 deaths. The figures have since soared to over 17,000 infections and more than 360 deaths.
"It is really hard to trade stocks," Li Shuwei, chairman at Beijing WanDeFu Investment Management, told the Straits Times. "It's impossible to predict how this disease will develop. Even the experts have no clear idea when the outbreak will end, let alone stock traders." He added: "It's too early to buy stocks right now and it's also difficult to sell as all shares are limit down. So I will just have to wait and see."
Also on rt.com China's first 'instant' coronavirus hospital accepting patients, second facility days from openingIn anticipation of a rout, the People's Bank of China said on Sunday that it would inject $1.2 trillion yuan (over $170 billion) into the Chinese markets using the purchase of short-term bonds to shore up banks' ability to lend money. The measure will help maintain "reasonably ample liquidity" in the banking system and keep currency markets stable, according to the bank.
For more stories on economy & finance visit RT's business section