Skip to main content
Top
Published in:
Cover of the book

2019 | OriginalPaper | Chapter

1. Demystifying China’s Stock Market: The Hidden Logic Behind the Puzzles

Authors : Eric Girardin, Zhenya Liu

Published in: Demystifying China’s Stock Market

Publisher: Springer International Publishing

Activate our intelligent search to find suitable subject content or patents.

search-config
loading …

Abstract

Mainstream research has rationalized China’s stock market on the basis of paradigms such as the institutional approach, the efficient market hypothesis, and corporate valuation principles. The deviations from such paradigms have been analysed as puzzles of China’s stock market. However, “research on China’s financial system should avoid over-applying research paradigms developed for the US setting” (Carpenter and Whitelaw, The Development of China’s Stock Market and Stakes for the Global Economy. Manuscript, New York Stern School of Business, June 2017). We will explore to what extent, far from being puzzles, these ‘deviations’ are rather the symptoms of a consistent strategy for the design, development, and regulation of a government-dominated financial system with Chinese characteristics.
The main characteristics of the Chinese stock market stem from its historical origins, development process and internal logic. The earliest Shanghai stock market appeared around 1865. It was foreign dominated both for issuers and investors, who were mostly individuals. China’s modern stock market largely inherited the speculative character of the early stock market.
The most striking feature of the modern market is government domination. The government aims at using the stock market to solve the long-term financing problem of state-owned enterprises. Therefore, this stock market is very different from the stock market of developed countries, generating the so-called “puzzles” in Westerners’ views. The dominance of political economy features, involving multiple principals, and the large gap between advanced regulations and poor enforcement, are the major sources of incompleteness of the Chinese stock market.

Dont have a licence yet? Then find out more about our products and how to get one now:

Springer Professional "Wirtschaft+Technik"

Online-Abonnement

Mit Springer Professional "Wirtschaft+Technik" erhalten Sie Zugriff auf:

  • über 102.000 Bücher
  • über 537 Zeitschriften

aus folgenden Fachgebieten:

  • Automobil + Motoren
  • Bauwesen + Immobilien
  • Business IT + Informatik
  • Elektrotechnik + Elektronik
  • Energie + Nachhaltigkeit
  • Finance + Banking
  • Management + Führung
  • Marketing + Vertrieb
  • Maschinenbau + Werkstoffe
  • Versicherung + Risiko

Jetzt Wissensvorsprung sichern!

Springer Professional "Wirtschaft"

Online-Abonnement

Mit Springer Professional "Wirtschaft" erhalten Sie Zugriff auf:

  • über 67.000 Bücher
  • über 340 Zeitschriften

aus folgenden Fachgebieten:

  • Bauwesen + Immobilien
  • Business IT + Informatik
  • Finance + Banking
  • Management + Führung
  • Marketing + Vertrieb
  • Versicherung + Risiko




Jetzt Wissensvorsprung sichern!

Footnotes
1
Deconcentration, which refers to the dispersion of control within one single organization, is more adapted to the Chinese setting than the, often used, concept of decentralization, which rather refers to the transfer of control from one organization to another (Lemieux 2008; Aritonang 2016). This can be linked to the distinction made by Gu Yanwu in his 1660 essay on the “Prefectural System” (see Kuhn 1975), between Junxian, referring to the division of the Chinese empire among administrative jurisdictions (prefectures, counties) governed by centrally appointed and rotated officials, and Fengjian, in which local elites govern localities.
 
Literature
go back to reference Allen, F., J. Qian, S.C. Shan, and J.L. Zhu. 2014. The Best Performing Economy with the Worst Performing Stock Market: Explaining the Poor Performance of the Chinese Stock Market. Manuscript, Imperial College, University of London. Allen, F., J. Qian, S.C. Shan, and J.L. Zhu. 2014. The Best Performing Economy with the Worst Performing Stock Market: Explaining the Poor Performance of the Chinese Stock Market. Manuscript, Imperial College, University of London.
go back to reference Aritonang, D.M. 2016. Politics of Deconcentration for Local Government: The Case of Indonesia. Journal of Law, Policy and Globalization 55: 79–86. Aritonang, D.M. 2016. Politics of Deconcentration for Local Government: The Case of Indonesia. Journal of Law, Policy and Globalization 55: 79–86.
go back to reference Carpenter, J.N., F. Lu, and R.F. Whitelaw. 2015. The Real Value of China’s Stock Market. NBER Working Paper, 20957. Carpenter, J.N., F. Lu, and R.F. Whitelaw. 2015. The Real Value of China’s Stock Market. NBER Working Paper, 20957.
go back to reference Carpenter, J.N., and R.F. Whitelaw. 2017. The Development of China’s Stock Market and Stakes for the Global Economy. Manuscript, New York Stern School of Business, June.CrossRef Carpenter, J.N., and R.F. Whitelaw. 2017. The Development of China’s Stock Market and Stakes for the Global Economy. Manuscript, New York Stern School of Business, June.CrossRef
go back to reference Cauley, J., and T. Sandler. 1992. Agency Theory and the Chinese Enterprise Reform. China Economic Review 3: 39–56.CrossRef Cauley, J., and T. Sandler. 1992. Agency Theory and the Chinese Enterprise Reform. China Economic Review 3: 39–56.CrossRef
go back to reference ———. 2001. Agency Costs and the Crisis of China’s SOEs. China Economic Review 12: 293–297.CrossRef ———. 2001. Agency Costs and the Crisis of China’s SOEs. China Economic Review 12: 293–297.CrossRef
go back to reference Hong, H., J. Scheinkman, and W. Xiong. 2006. Asset Float and Speculative Bubbles. Journal of Finance 61: 1073–1117.CrossRef Hong, H., J. Scheinkman, and W. Xiong. 2006. Asset Float and Speculative Bubbles. Journal of Finance 61: 1073–1117.CrossRef
go back to reference Kuhn, P.A. 1975. Local Self-government Under the Republic: Problems of Controls, Autonomy and Mobilization. In Conflict and Control in Late Imperial China, ed. F. Wakeman Jr. and C. Grant, 257–298. Berkeley: University of California Press. Kuhn, P.A. 1975. Local Self-government Under the Republic: Problems of Controls, Autonomy and Mobilization. In Conflict and Control in Late Imperial China, ed. F. Wakeman Jr. and C. Grant, 257–298. Berkeley: University of California Press.
go back to reference Lemieux, V. 2008. Deconcentration and Decentralization: A Question of Terminology. Canadian Public Administration 29 (2): 318–323.CrossRef Lemieux, V. 2008. Deconcentration and Decentralization: A Question of Terminology. Canadian Public Administration 29 (2): 318–323.CrossRef
go back to reference Li, L.W., and C.J. Milhaupt. 2013. We are the (National) Champions: Understanding the Mechanisms of State Capitalism in China. Stanford Law Review 65 (4): 697–760. Li, L.W., and C.J. Milhaupt. 2013. We are the (National) Champions: Understanding the Mechanisms of State Capitalism in China. Stanford Law Review 65 (4): 697–760.
go back to reference Naughton, B. 1996. Growing Out of the Plan: Chinese Economic Reform, 1978–1993. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Naughton, B. 1996. Growing Out of the Plan: Chinese Economic Reform, 1978–1993. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
go back to reference Pomeranz, K. 1997. Traditional Chinese Business Forms Revisited: Family, Firm, and Financing in the History of the Yutang Company of Jining, 1779–1956. Late Imperial China 18: 1–38.CrossRef Pomeranz, K. 1997. Traditional Chinese Business Forms Revisited: Family, Firm, and Financing in the History of the Yutang Company of Jining, 1779–1956. Late Imperial China 18: 1–38.CrossRef
go back to reference Scheinkman, J., and W. Xiong. 2003. Overconfidence and Speculative Bubbles. Journal of Political Economy 111: 1183–1219.CrossRef Scheinkman, J., and W. Xiong. 2003. Overconfidence and Speculative Bubbles. Journal of Political Economy 111: 1183–1219.CrossRef
go back to reference Zelin, M. 2005. The Merchants of Zigong: Industrial Entrepreneurship in Early Modern China. New York: Columbia University Press. Zelin, M. 2005. The Merchants of Zigong: Industrial Entrepreneurship in Early Modern China. New York: Columbia University Press.
Metadata
Title
Demystifying China’s Stock Market: The Hidden Logic Behind the Puzzles
Authors
Eric Girardin
Zhenya Liu
Copyright Year
2019
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-17123-0_1