Chinese Government officials got real worried when the Shanghai continued
its parabolic rise and blew through its 12 year Major resistance level.
This morning, their markets dropped over 6% after the government increased
the stamp tax on Security transactions. The news media are making a "big deal" out
of the tax increase by running headlines that say, "China China's CSI 300 Drops
After Transaction Tax Tripled".
Tripling any tax sounds like something terrible being inflicted on Chinese
investors, but that is not the real story. The real story is that the
stamp tax was initiated in the early 90's at 0.6%. That's six tenths of 1%
... not much of a tax rate by any standards. Over time, they lowered the tax
rate to 0.1% to promote investing in their stock market. Yes, today they tripled
it, but that only took it to 0.3% or one half of what it was when it started.
When was the last time the Chinese government raised the tax and what happened
afterwards? It was in May of 1997, and the tax was increased from 0.3% to
0.5%. The next day, the Shanghai Composite rose 2.3%. And then, slowly
over the next 10 weeks, the Shanghai dropped just under 30%.
At 0.3%, the tax may not be high enough to get the desired effect the government
wants ... here is why:
From February 7 of this year to May 29th., the Shanghai Composite rose 70.6%
or about 1.18% per day. A 0.30% tax can be paid off from the first 99.43
minutes of the average trading day in China. This big "Tripling tax rates" that
the media is touting is peanuts compared to the average daily return. See the
chart below for the calculations.

This morning's reaction was a knee-jerk reaction that still left the Shanghai
Composite Index above its support line as seen in our chart below. If it breaks
through the support level tomorrow morning, then it could drop 500 points for
another 12% drop. There is a good probability that it would rebound back up
from there forcing the Chinese government to initiate another tax increase.
It is more likely that the second increase to around 0.5% would get the desired
action that the government wants.
China had a bear market from 2001 to 2005. At that time, their key index fell
from 2,300 to under 1,000 points while their economy grew by about 10 percent
per year. The World Bank just raised its forecast of China's economic growth
this year to 10.4 %, from the previous 9.6 % projection.
A 20% drop on the Shanghai would cause a modest impact on their economy according
to J.P. Morgan. A 50% drop would do significant damage to their citizens and
economy with a strong likelihood that the Chinese would protest with public
demonstrations and civil disorder. The current sentiment of many Chinese investors
is that they shouldn't sell because only then would they have a "real loss".
I announced early in the year that China would have a stock market crash sometime
this year. I don't feel that this is it right now, but it is the beginning
of a process where a China crash will unfold from.

The links for all our previous China Stories, Analyses, and updates are below: