The Chinese stock market fell significantly on Monday, with the Shanghai Composite Index closing down 3.63% at 3,813.28 points, marking the largest single-day drop in nearly a year. It briefly dropped below the 3,800-point threshold before slightly rebounding. The CSI 300 Index fell by 3.26%, the ChiNext Index dropped 3.49%, and the STAR Market 50 Index declined by 4.31%. The escalation in Middle Eastern conflicts raised the global risk premium, prompting investors to quickly reduce their risk exposure.
Market Reaction
Refinitiv data shows that major A-share indices declined across the board, with the market exhibiting a systemic selling pattern. In terms of sectors, the CSI Tourism Index dropped 5.8%, the CSI All Share Semiconductor Products and Equipment Index fell by 5.1%, and the non-ferrous metals sector also recorded a 4.6% decline, indicating that both cyclical and growth sectors were under pressure.
Macroeconomic Drivers
The escalation in the Middle East situation became a trigger factor. Iran stated that if the U.S. strikes its critical infrastructure, it would retaliate against energy and water supply systems in the Gulf region. There are market concerns that energy supply disruptions could further drive up oil prices and exacerbate global inflationary pressures.
Meanwhile, U.S. Treasury yields rose to an eight-month high, reinforcing expectations of "higher rates for longer," which pressures the valuation of global equity assets.
Capital Behavior
Several institutional investors indicated that the current stage is focused on reducing positions. A macro hedge fund manager in East China stated they are maintaining a light position and observing, while a private equity manager mentioned they have further reduced positions in the early trading session. The capital behavior reflects a risk-aversion sentiment dominating short-term market trading logic.
Policy Observations
Analysts point out that in the context of systemic risk release, the market will closely watch whether regulators signal stability. If policy measures to stabilize the market emerge, they may help relieve market volatility.
Investment Outlook
In the short term, the trajectory of A-shares will depend on geopolitical developments and global interest rate paths. If oil prices remain high and drive inflation expectations upward, risk assets may continue to be under pressure; if policy signals shift towards stable growth, the market might gradually stabilize. The above judgments are based on the current market environment analysis.