Hong Kong stocks see worst fall in three months as protester is shot, man set on fire
- Hang Seng benchmark fell 2.6 per cent, while the Shanghai Composite Index dropped 1.8 per cent
- City says it has no plans to suspend stock trading or impose curbs on cash withdrawals at banks
Hong Kong stocks suffered their worst fall in three months on Monday, as anti-government protests turned into horrifying scenes, including a man being set on fire.
A college-aged protester was shot and petrol bombs were thrown into a subway train with passengers in a day that spun from one shocking scene to another in a city long known for its safety and efficiency.
The Hang Seng Index fell 2.6 per cent to 26,926.55, with only one of the 50 constituent stocks posting a gain. It had risen 8 per cent over the past month to close at 27,651.14 points on Friday, setting off technical warnings that it was in overbought territory.
Meanwhile, with rumours circulating on social media, the city’s government felt it necessary to say there were no plans to suspend stock market trading or impose restrictions on cash withdrawals from banks.
China stocks also suffered losses, on fears of rising inflation as pork prices surge and scepticism that Washington and Beijing are making progress in solving their trade war that is partly to blame for China’s slowing economy.