China stocks remain steady while electric vehicle shares lend support
CGTN
["china"]
China stocks were steady on Monday, as investors cheered the government’s plan to look into banning petrol fuel cars while new central bank policies apparently aimed at taming rapid gains in the yuan were also in focus. 
The blue-chip CSI300 index was unchanged at 3,825.65 points, while the Shanghai Composite Index added 0.3% to 3,376.42 points.
China’s new-energy auto firms saw shares surge, extending recent strong gains, after a government official said over the weekend that China had begun looking at a ban on traditional petrol-engine cars.
VCG Photo

VCG Photo

An index tracking new-energy vehicle makers shot up 5.6% to record high since its launch in early 2016, having gained more than 20% this year.
Much attention was on central bank moves to rein in the yuan’s recent strength. China’s central bank on Monday said it had removed reserve requirements for financial institutions settling foreign exchange forward yuan positions and those for offshore yuan deposits in China at foreign institutions.
Analysts interpreted it as a signal the PBOC doesn’t want to see the yuan appreciate too quickly against the dollar. A strong yuan would benefit sectors such as banking, real estate and airlines, but hurt exporters. 
CGTN Photo

CGTN Photo

Investors are also assessing the sustainability of China’s economic recovery, after data showed government spending rose at its slowest monthly pace in 10 months in August.
China has pledged a proactive fiscal policy to support the economy, and analysts have credited Beijing’s pump-priming as one of the key factors underpinning solid growth this year.
Sector performance was mixed. Gains were led by material firms, while real estate companies weighed.
China Molybdenum, one of the country’s largest molybdenum and tungsten producers, surged the maximum allowed 9.9% to a record high, as investors expect the minor metals maker to benefit from the country’s future ban on petrol cars. 
1069km
Source(s): AP ,AFP ,Reuters