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Spread bets and CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 71% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading spread bets and CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how spread bets and CFDs work, and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.

China's economic slowdown

The first two months of 2016 saw fears over China’s manufacturing, economic and stock market slowdown cause havoc across global markets. Find out what happened, and take a position with IG.

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January 2016 - Chinese chaos kicks off 2016

Worries over China’s ability to keep up its rapid pace of economic growth dramatically increased when PMI data came in weaker than expected, meaning China’s contraction had now lasted ten months – and causing chaos around world markets. 

For the first time, Chinese regulators activated a suspension in trading as a circuit breaker safety measure. As in August 2015, state-directed buying of stocks competed with individual selling of equities, but China’s attempt to ‘buck the market’ failed.

The butterfly effect was also felt in Europe, with an initial bounce giving way to more selling, while in London the FTSE fought hard to hold on to small gains. 

Read our full story

7 January – The selloff continues

Later in the week, the CSI 300 was in freefall once again – trading for just 29 minutes before the circuit breaker closed the index for another day. It was becoming clear that the measure implemented by Chinese regulators to induce calm into panicked markets was having the opposite effect, causing frenzied attempts to sell before the exchange closed once more. 

And fears over China’s economic strength plagued markets around the globe, with the FTSE 100 and S&P 500 facing 5% losses from the start of the year. Commodity stocks and commodity prices were particularly affected, as traders faced up to a year in which China could drastically reduce its oil and metal consumption.

Read our full story

8 January - A measure of calm

The following day saw indices on the rise once more, after the Chinese regulator decided to abandon the circuit breaker measure and allow selling to continue past its 7% threshold. The move was hailed as a step in the right direction by many analysts, as traders’ fears of getting locked in to a freefalling market abated.

However, doubts over China’s economic performance in 2016 still persisted and key indices were still facing major losses from the beginning of the year.

Read our full story

25 January – Concerns surface once more

After two weeks of relative calm, the CSI 300 entered another period of heavy selling at the end of January, with investors growing concerned once again that capital would flow out of China’s stock market as its economic growth stalled.

For the first time since its circuit breaker was removed, the Chinese regulator saw the CSI drop more than its 7% limit in a single day. However, this time market fears were far more localised – the FTSE and Dow Jones increased in value as the China 300 dropped.

How the markets have performed since

Over the next few months, fears that China’s slowdown in growth would prove a major problem slowly abated. Economic figures suggested that Chinese growth was slowing steadily, not dropping off a cliff. And perhaps more importantly, traders quickly found that Brexit and a potentially damaging US election presented more of a threat to global markets – in the short term at least.

Concern may have lessened, but it never truly went away. Any sign that China’s economy is performing below expectations can reverberate across global markets still, and it would not be wise to assume that China’s economic slowdown won’t return to the headlines at some point in the future.

Markets Sell Buy Updated Change
China 300
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China A50
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China H-Shares
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Hong Kong HS50
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Spot FX AUD/CNH
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Copper
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Prices above are subject to our website terms and conditions. Prices are indicative only.

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2016 financial events

China's economic slowdown was one of the biggest market-moving events of 2016. Learn more about other key financial events in 2016.