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cover of episode China Ramps Up Support for Stock Market

China Ramps Up Support for Stock Market

2025/1/23
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WSJ Minute Briefing

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Luke Vargas
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我报道了中国政府正在采取措施提振股市,主要手段是鼓励国有保险公司和共同基金增持股票。官方预计,今年上半年将有近140亿美元流入股市。然而,分析师认为,北京方面恢复投资者信心的努力仍未奏效。中国大陆基准股指当日小幅上涨。虽然政府的干预措施在短期内可能对股市产生一定的支撑作用,但长期来看,股市健康发展仍需依赖于宏观经济环境的改善和投资者信心的真正恢复。单纯依靠政府的资金注入并不能解决根本问题,反而可能导致市场扭曲和风险积累。因此,中国政府需要采取更全面的措施,例如深化改革,优化市场监管,营造公平透明的市场环境,才能真正提振投资者信心,促进股市可持续发展。

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This episode is brought to you by Shopify. Upgrade your business with Shopify, home of the number one checkout on the planet. ShopPay boosts conversions up to 50%, meaning fewer cards going abandoned and more sales going cha-ching. So if you're into growing your business, get a commerce platform that's ready to sell wherever your customers are. Visit Shopify.com to upgrade your selling today. Here is your morning brief for Thursday, January 23rd. I'm Luke Vargas for The Wall Street Journal.

China is ramping up efforts to prop up its stock markets by encouraging state-owned insurers and mutual funds to buy Chinese equities. Officials expect nearly $14 billion to pour into stocks in the first half of the year, though analysts say that Beijing's moves to revive investor confidence are still falling short. Benchmark indexes in mainland China ended the day slightly higher.

NVIDIA supplier SK Hynix has posted stronger-than-expected quarterly earnings thanks to continued strong demand for high-end memory chips that help power AI. Its dominance of that market has pushed its share price almost 60% higher over the past 12 months, though the stock slipped around 3% today in Seoul.

And U.S. inflation is set to rise over the coming year, along with U.S. economic growth, according to the journal's latest survey of economists carried out earlier this month.

It suggests that President Trump's tariffs could pass along higher costs to consumers, leading to projected inflation of 2.7 percent over the coming 12 months, compared with previous forecasts of 2.3 percent, even as the broader economy gathers momentum thanks to strong consumer spending.

Asian stocks have ended the day mixed. European stocks are little changed in midday trading. And in the U.S., stock futures are flat, ahead of earnings from the likes of GE Aerospace, American Airlines, and Texas Instruments. And we've got a lot more coverage of the day's news on the WSJ's What's News podcast. You can add it to your playlist on your smart speaker or listen and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts.