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Tytuł strony (bez przestrzeni nazw) (page_title) | 'Shanghai Stocks Fall For Third Session Amid COVID Woes; Property...' |
Pełny tytuł strony (page_prefixedtitle) | 'Shanghai Stocks Fall For Third Session Amid COVID Woes; Property...' |
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Nowa treść strony, po modyfikacji (new_wikitext) | '[https://www.washingtonpost.com/arts-entertainment/2019/10/15/sean-spicers-first-month-dancing-with-stars-low-scores-mockery-no-sign-being-voted-off/ washingtonpost.com]<br>SHANGHAI, July 25 (Reuters) - China stocks ended down for a third straight session on Monday on COVID-19 flare-ups and global recession concerns, although realty companies surged as a source told Reuters that Beijing was planning to provide them financial support.<br> <br>The blue-chip CSI300 fell 0.6% to 4,212.64, while the Shanghai Composite lost 0.6% to 3,250.39 points.<br> <br>The Hang Seng index fell 0.2% to 20,562.94, while the China Enterprises index lost 0.4% to 7,077.09 points.<br> <br>** Mainland China reported 800 new coronavirus cases for Sunday.<br> <br>** Other Asian stocks also lost ground, as worries about a global economic downturn sapped investors' risk appetite.<br> <br>** "A-shares appeared relatively weak since July, following a strong rebound," said CICC in a note, adding that investors should focus on the potential upcoming July Politburo meeting.<br> <br>** China will set up a real estate taglines, [https://Things-To-Do-California.Weebly.com/ Things-To-Do-California.Weebly.com], estate fund to help developers resolve a crippling debt crisis, aiming for a war chest of up to 300 billion yuan ($44.4 billion), according to a state bank official with direct knowledge of the matter.<br> <br>** The Hang Seng Mainland Properties Index jumped 3.2%, and the CSI 300 Real Estate Index rose 1.9%.<br> <br>** Shares in new energy firms, automobiles and communications equipment makers declined more than 2%.<br> <br>** Meng Lei, China Equities Strategist at UBS Securities said the market is likely to enter a consolidation stage near term, citing broad-based second-quarter earnings downgrades, no significant fund inflows and relative low level of new mutual funds issuance.<br> <br>** The Shanghai Stock Exchange (SSE) vowed to maintain market stability ahead of the politically significant 20th Party Congress later this year.<br> <br>** China's transport ministry tightened existing rules governing how online ride-hailing firms should handle and share their data with regulators, signaling tighter regulatory scrutiny.<br> <br>** Tech giants listed in Hong Kong dropped 1.4%, with index heavyweights Alibaba, Tencent and Meituan down between 1.7% and 2.5%.<br> <br>** Meanwhile, China's securities regulator on Monday denied a Financial Times report that China was planning to sort U.S.-listed Chinese companies into groups based on the sensitivity of the data they hold, bringing them into [https://kscripts.com/?s=compliance compliance] with U.S.<br><br>rules. (Reporting by Shanghai Newsroom; editing by Uttaresh.V and Vinay Dwivedi)<br>' |
Diff wszystkich zmian dokonanych podczas edycji (edit_diff) | '@@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
+[https://www.washingtonpost.com/arts-entertainment/2019/10/15/sean-spicers-first-month-dancing-with-stars-low-scores-mockery-no-sign-being-voted-off/ washingtonpost.com]<br>SHANGHAI, July 25 (Reuters) - China stocks ended down for a third straight session on Monday on COVID-19 flare-ups and global recession concerns, although realty companies surged as a source told Reuters that Beijing was planning to provide them financial support.<br> <br>The blue-chip CSI300 fell 0.6% to 4,212.64, while the Shanghai Composite lost 0.6% to 3,250.39 points.<br> <br>The Hang Seng index fell 0.2% to 20,562.94, while the China Enterprises index lost 0.4% to 7,077.09 points.<br> <br>** Mainland China reported 800 new coronavirus cases for Sunday.<br> <br>** Other Asian stocks also lost ground, as worries about a global economic downturn sapped investors' risk appetite.<br> <br>** "A-shares appeared relatively weak since July, following a strong rebound," said CICC in a note, adding that investors should focus on the potential upcoming July Politburo meeting.<br> <br>** China will set up a real estate taglines, [https://Things-To-Do-California.Weebly.com/ Things-To-Do-California.Weebly.com], estate fund to help developers resolve a crippling debt crisis, aiming for a war chest of up to 300 billion yuan ($44.4 billion), according to a state bank official with direct knowledge of the matter.<br> <br>** The Hang Seng Mainland Properties Index jumped 3.2%, and the CSI 300 Real Estate Index rose 1.9%.<br> <br>** Shares in new energy firms, automobiles and communications equipment makers declined more than 2%.<br> <br>** Meng Lei, China Equities Strategist at UBS Securities said the market is likely to enter a consolidation stage near term, citing broad-based second-quarter earnings downgrades, no significant fund inflows and relative low level of new mutual funds issuance.<br> <br>** The Shanghai Stock Exchange (SSE) vowed to maintain market stability ahead of the politically significant 20th Party Congress later this year.<br> <br>** China's transport ministry tightened existing rules governing how online ride-hailing firms should handle and share their data with regulators, signaling tighter regulatory scrutiny.<br> <br>** Tech giants listed in Hong Kong dropped 1.4%, with index heavyweights Alibaba, Tencent and Meituan down between 1.7% and 2.5%.<br> <br>** Meanwhile, China's securities regulator on Monday denied a Financial Times report that China was planning to sort U.S.-listed Chinese companies into groups based on the sensitivity of the data they hold, bringing them into [https://kscripts.com/?s=compliance compliance] with U.S.<br><br>rules. (Reporting by Shanghai Newsroom; editing by Uttaresh.V and Vinay Dwivedi)<br>
' |
Linie dodane podczas edycji (added_lines) | [
0 => '[https://www.washingtonpost.com/arts-entertainment/2019/10/15/sean-spicers-first-month-dancing-with-stars-low-scores-mockery-no-sign-being-voted-off/ washingtonpost.com]<br>SHANGHAI, July 25 (Reuters) - China stocks ended down for a third straight session on Monday on COVID-19 flare-ups and global recession concerns, although realty companies surged as a source told Reuters that Beijing was planning to provide them financial support.<br> <br>The blue-chip CSI300 fell 0.6% to 4,212.64, while the Shanghai Composite lost 0.6% to 3,250.39 points.<br> <br>The Hang Seng index fell 0.2% to 20,562.94, while the China Enterprises index lost 0.4% to 7,077.09 points.<br> <br>** Mainland China reported 800 new coronavirus cases for Sunday.<br> <br>** Other Asian stocks also lost ground, as worries about a global economic downturn sapped investors' risk appetite.<br> <br>** "A-shares appeared relatively weak since July, following a strong rebound," said CICC in a note, adding that investors should focus on the potential upcoming July Politburo meeting.<br> <br>** China will set up a real estate taglines, [https://Things-To-Do-California.Weebly.com/ Things-To-Do-California.Weebly.com], estate fund to help developers resolve a crippling debt crisis, aiming for a war chest of up to 300 billion yuan ($44.4 billion), according to a state bank official with direct knowledge of the matter.<br> <br>** The Hang Seng Mainland Properties Index jumped 3.2%, and the CSI 300 Real Estate Index rose 1.9%.<br> <br>** Shares in new energy firms, automobiles and communications equipment makers declined more than 2%.<br> <br>** Meng Lei, China Equities Strategist at UBS Securities said the market is likely to enter a consolidation stage near term, citing broad-based second-quarter earnings downgrades, no significant fund inflows and relative low level of new mutual funds issuance.<br> <br>** The Shanghai Stock Exchange (SSE) vowed to maintain market stability ahead of the politically significant 20th Party Congress later this year.<br> <br>** China's transport ministry tightened existing rules governing how online ride-hailing firms should handle and share their data with regulators, signaling tighter regulatory scrutiny.<br> <br>** Tech giants listed in Hong Kong dropped 1.4%, with index heavyweights Alibaba, Tencent and Meituan down between 1.7% and 2.5%.<br> <br>** Meanwhile, China's securities regulator on Monday denied a Financial Times report that China was planning to sort U.S.-listed Chinese companies into groups based on the sensitivity of the data they hold, bringing them into [https://kscripts.com/?s=compliance compliance] with U.S.<br><br>rules. (Reporting by Shanghai Newsroom; editing by Uttaresh.V and Vinay Dwivedi)<br>'
] |