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Asia

US-Iran Truce 'Extremely Fragile,' China Top Diplomat Says

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said the truce between the U.S. and Iran is "extremely fragile" and called on the international community to oppose anything that will undermine the temporary suspension of hostilities, the ministry said Monday.Wang made the remarks during a phone call with Pakistani counterpart Mohammad Ishaq ​Dar, according to the ministry.The ministry said it welcomes Pakistan's role in resolving the U.S.-Iran conflict.

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
International

Persian Gulf Outlook Lifts Asian Stock Markets

Asian stock markets rallied on Tuesday after US President Donald Trump indicated that Tehran-Washington negotiations to end Persian Gulf hostilities might resume, and as relative calm prevailed in the Strait of Hormuz.Hong Kong, Shanghai and Tokyo finished in the green, as did other regional exchanges, led by 2.7% rise on Seoul's KOSPI index. Exchanges in Bangkok and Mumbai were closed on holiday.In Japan, the Nikkei 225 opened higher and rose to the close, finishing up 2.4% on Middle East outlooks and after US military ships navigated the Strait of Hormuz without incident.The benchmark Nikkei 225 rose 1,374.62 to 57,877.39, as gaining issues outnumbered losers 136 to 87.Leading the upside was tech-financiers SoftBank, up 12.7%, while property-concern Haseko declined 5.7%.In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng Index opened higher, wobbled, but closed up 0.8% on strength in property issues.The broad gauge Hang Seng rose 211.47 to 25,872.32, as gaining issues outnumbered losers 61 to 29. The Hang Seng TECH Index gained 0.6% on the day, while the Mainland Properties Index rallied 3.2%.Leading the upside was toymaker Pop Mart International, gaining 6.5%, while Xinyi Solar declined 3.4%.On the mainland, the Shanghai Composite rose 1% to 4,026.63.In economic news, China's export growth slowed to 2.5% on-year in March, down from 21.8% on-year logged in the first two months of the year, reported the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).In contrast, China's imports rose 27.8% on year in March, up from the 19.8% on-year gain recorded in the first two months of the year.On the other regional exchanges, the Taiwan TWSE inclined 2.4%, the Australian ASX 200 inclined 0.5% and the Singapore Straits Times Index rose 0.5%.The MSCI All Country Asia Pacific Index rose 1.9% on the day.

Hang SengNikkei 225Shanghai Composite
Asia

Market Chatter: China's Economy Rebounds in Q1 But Outlook Darkens on Global Risks

China's economy likely picked up pace early in 2026, buoyed by resilient exports, but momentum is set to fade as geopolitical tensions weigh on demand, a Reuters poll showed.Economists forecast first-quarter gross domestic product growth at 4.8% year-on-year, up from 4.5% in Q4 2025, according to the Monday report.Expansion is seen easing to 4.7% in Q2, with full-year growth at 4.6%, Reuters wrote.While energy buffers have softened the impact of the Iran crisis, higher oil prices are squeezing margins and threatening exports, the report said.(Market Chatter news is derived from conversations with market professionals globally. This information is believed to be from reliable sources but may include rumor and speculation. Accuracy is not guaranteed.)

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
Asia

Market Chatter: China Says Hormuz Blockade Threatens Global Interests

China warned that any blockade of the Strait of Hormuz would harm global interests, urging restraint as tensions escalate over Iran, Reuters reported Monday.Foreign Minister Wang Yi told U.A.E. envoy Khaldoon Khalifa Al Mubarak that diplomacy and a lasting ceasefire remain the only viable path forward, according to the report.The warning came after the U.S. Central Command announced plans to halt maritime traffic to Iranian ports following failed talks in Islamabad, Reuters wrote.Beijing backed continued negotiations and denied claims of arms supplies, calling them "groundless" and "malicious," according to the report.(Market Chatter news is derived from conversations with market professionals globally. This information is believed to be from reliable sources but may include rumor and speculation. Accuracy is not guaranteed.)

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
International

Shanghai Sees Strong Growth in January-February

Shanghai's manufacturing output in artificial intelligence, integrated circuits and biomedicine surged nearly 14% in January and February.Retail sales jumped 7.2% and fixed-asset investment rose 7.4%, according to Wu Wei, executive vice mayor of Shanghai.In the first quarter, the city's foreign trade jumped 22%

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
Asia

Market Chatter: Chinese AI Startups to Ditch Offshore IPO Structures

Shanghai-based artificial intelligence company StepFun is dismantling its Cayman Islands holding structure for a Hong Kong listing, as Beijing cracks down on red-chip vehicles long used for overseas fundraising, Reuters reported Monday, citing three sources.China's securities regulator recently ordered offshore-registered companies with China-based assets to unwind the setup, according to the report. StepFun, which develops general-purpose foundation models, now sees an onshore structure as more suitable due to its heavy state backing.Meanwhile, AI peer Moonshot, creator of the Kimi language model, is also reconsidering its offshore incorporation, Reuters wrote.Moonshot is raising $1 billion at an $18 billion valuation and could pursue a Hong Kong IPO later this year, according to the report.(Market Chatter news is derived from conversations with market professionals globally. This information is believed to be from reliable sources but may include rumor and speculation. Accuracy is not guaranteed.)

Hang SengShanghai Composite^SZSE
International

China's Trade Balance Weakens in March

China's balance of trade saw a surplus of $51.13 billion in March, according to data from Customs released Tuesday.The figure was weaker compared with a $213.62 billion surplus in February, and missing analsyts' estimates of $107.5 billion during the month, according to a report by Investing.com.Exports jumped 2.5% year over year to $321 billion during the month, Customs said. The growth rate missed a forecast of 8.3%, Investing.com reported.Imports soared 27.8% year over year to $269.9 billion during the month, exceeding expectations, and up from a 19.8% rise seen in the January-February period, according to multiple media reports.The balance of trade for the quarter reached $264.3 billion.

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
Asia

China Stocks Jump on Potential 2nd US-Iran Talks

China's shares climbed amid hopes that the tensions between the U.S. and Iran will cool down after President Donald Trump threatened to blockade the Strait of Hormuz.The Shanghai Composite Index added 1%, or 38.07 points, to close Tuesday's trade at 4,026.63, while the Shenzhen Component Index jumped 1.6%, or 232.09 points to 14,639.95.Sentiment was uplifted amid reports that the U.S. and Iran are still communication, with the possibility of a second in-person meeting, despite failed negotiations in Pakistan. Trump said Tehran wants "to work a deal" with the U.S. amid the effectivity of the blockade.In corporate news, Sinomach Precision Industry (SHE:002046) jumped 5.8% amid its forecast that it would swing to an attributable loss of between 8 million yuan and 12 million yuan in the first quarter.Henan Shenhuo Coal & Power (SHE:000933) climbed 4.4% after its net profit attributable to shareholders in the first quarter soared 223% year on year to 2.29 billion yuan.

Shanghai Composite^SZSESHE:000933SHE:002046
Asia

Market Chatter: Chinese Export Growth Hits Bump in March on Iran War Pessimism

Growth in Chinese exports are expected to have slowed to 8.6% year over year in dollar terms in March, down from 21.8% in January and February, Reuters reported Monday, citing a poll by the newswire.The deceleration could be attributable to the energy shocks driven by the Iran war and its impact on artificial intelligence enthusiasm, the report said.The war in Iran could temper expectations of tech-powered exports breaking the record $1.2 trillion surplus in 2025, according to the report.The report stated that March served as the initial assessment of AI enthusiasm's capacity to counteract energy sector pessimism, a situation exacerbated by the Strait of Hormuz closure.Stockpiling of commodities helped cushion the blow of raw-material shocks on producer prices, the report said.(Market Chatter news is derived from conversations with market professionals globally. This information is believed to be from reliable sources but may include rumor and speculation. Accuracy is not guaranteed.)

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
International

Middle East Escalation Could Cost Asia Up to $299 Billion, UNDP Warns

The ongoing military escalation in the Middle East could inflict economic losses of up to $299 billion across Asia and the Pacific, as higher fuel, freight and input costs ripple through regional economies, UNDP's latest assessment report release Tuesday showed.The report said the shock is weakening household purchasing power, increasing food insecurity, straining public budgets and undermining livelihoods, particularly in countries heavily reliant on imported energy and food, as well as those exposed to Gulf trade routes, labor markets and remittance flows.It estimated that under a 28-day disruption scenario, regional output losses could range between $97 billion and $299 billion, equivalent to 0.3% to 0.8% of GDP, with South Asia facing the most pronounced impact.Around 8.8 million people across 14 countries could fall into poverty, including more than 5 million in Iran, where the poverty rate may rise from 36% to 41.5%, according to the simulations.The report, prepared as of April 9, draws on inputs from 22 UNDP country offices covering 36 countries, alongside modelling and external data. It noted that outcomes will depend heavily on the duration and intensity of the conflict, with risks rising further if disruptions persist.

^BSE^DSE^HNX^HOSEHang Seng^JKSEFTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI^KOSDAQKOSPINikkei 225Nifty 50^PSEI^SETShanghai Composite^STI^SZSETaiwan Weighted^YSX
International

China's Outstanding Total Social Financing Rises 8% as of End-March

China's outstanding total social financing rose 7.9% year on year to 456.5 trillion yuan as of the end of March, the People's Bank of China said in a press release published late Monday.Among these are outstanding renminbi-denominated loans, which climbed 5.8% from a year earlier to 277.3 trillion yuan, accounting for 60.7%, and outstanding foreign currency loans, which declined 5.3% to 1.120 trillion yuan, accounting for 0.2% of the total social financing.Outstanding government bonds, which accounted for 21.6% of social financing, recorded the biggest increase, jumping 15.9% year on year to 98.5 trillion yuan. It was followed by outstanding corporate bonds, which climbed 7.9% to 35.2 trillion yuan.Meanwhile, the total social financing during the first quarter declined by 354.5 billion yuan to 14.8 trillion yuan.Renminbi-denominated loans also rose by 8.6 trillion yuan, with the outstanding balance of renminbi-denominated loans rising 5.7% to 280.51 trillion yuan.

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
International

China Posts 8.5% Rise in March Broad Money Supply

China's broad money supply climbed 8.5% year on year to 353.9 trillion yuan in March, according to data from the People's Bank of China.Narrow money supply climbed 5.1% to 119.3 trillion yuan, while currency in circulation balance rose 13% to 14.7 trillion yuan.Net cash injection in the first quarter was 613.5 billion yuan.

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
Asia

China's Q1 Yuan Loans Rise by 8.6 Trillion Yuan

China's yuan-denominated loans rose 8.6 trillion yuan in the first quarter, according to data from the People's Bank of China.Household loans rose by 296.7 billion yuan, loans to enterprises and institutions increased by 8.6 trillion yuan and loans to non-bank financial institutions decreased by 368 billion yuan.At the end of March, domestic and foreign currency yuan loans rose 5.7% year on year to 284.5 trillion yuan.

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
US Markets

Asian Development Bank Tempers APAC GDP Forecasts for 2026

The Middle East outlook and consequent higher oil prices will temper the economic expansion of developing countries in the Asia Pacific in 2026, reported the Asian Development Bank (ADB) late Friday.Economic growth in developing Asia is expected to slow to 5.1% in both 2026 and 2027, down from the previous 5.4% estimate, weighed down by the Persian Gulf conflict and continuing trade uncertainty, said the ADB.The Asian Development Bank (ADB) makes economic projections for developing nations in Asia, focusing on gross domestic product (GDP) growth and inflation outlooks. The ADB forecasts cover 46 nations, including China and India, and all 10 ASEAN members."Higher energy prices will raise production costs and consumer prices, while export growth will normalize following last year's front-loading ahead of US tariff increases," said the ADB. "Solid domestic demand---particularly in South Asia and developing Southeast Asia---will continue to anchor growth."Regional inflation is projected to rise to 3.6% in 2026 and 3.4% in 2027, up from 3% last year, added the ADB.GDP growth in China is projected to decline to 4.6% in 2026 and 4.5% in 2027, down from 5% in 2025, "with continued property market weakness and slower export expansion expected to weigh on activity," said the ADB."In India, growth is forecast to ease to 6.9% this year from 7.6% last year, before rising to 7.3% next year, underpinned by resilient domestic consumption," added the ADB, a Manila-based regional bank that lends on infrastructure and other projects.

^BSE^JKSEFTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI^NSE^SETShanghai Composite
Asia

Chinese Miners Boost Expansion Abroad, S&P says

Chinese miners have boosted their expansion abroad, pointing to a structural change in the sector, S&P Global Ratings said in a Monday release.The recent development is in contrast with the previous government-pushed "go-out" phase led by state-owned enterprises, S&P said.Private companies are focusing on acquisitions abroad to become global players, increase product portfolios, and push for geographic diversification, the rating agency said.Companies that have better financial strength and are more commercially driven have led the overseas move, while metals markets continue to be favorable, S&P said.The rating agency views rated Chinese miners as having broadly solid operating cash flow and good financing access, which anchor their ability to have material investments abroad.

Shanghai Composite^SZSE
International

Oil Goes Up, Asian Stock Markets Go Down

Asian stock markets fell back and oil prices rose after US President Donald Trump said the US will block the Strait of Hormuz, after ceasefire negotiations between Washington and Tehran collapsed over the weekend.Hong Kong and Tokyo finished in the red, while Shanghai inched into the green. Other regional exchanges largely declined, with Bangkok closed on holiday.In Japan, the Nikkei 225 opened lower and could not recover, finishing off 0.7% as traders weighed rising oil prices.Brent crude traded near $103 a barrel, up 8% from Friday. About 40% of oil consumed in the Asian Pacific passes through the Persian Gulf.The benchmark Nikkei 225 fell 421.34 to 56,502.77, as losing issues outnumbered gainers 157 to 63.Leading the upside was advertising-PR shop Dentsu, gaining 10.1%, while plumbing-fixtures maker Toto declined 7.2%.In other news, the Japanese national government approved another $4 billion of funds to state-backed Rapidus for R&D on advanced chips, bringing the total to over $14 billion in assistance, as Tokyo seeks reliable supply of semiconductors, reported The Mainichi newspaper.In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng Index opened lower and traded sideways, closing down 0.9% as traders weighed Persian Gulf turmoils.The broad gauge Hang Seng fell 232.69 to 25,660.85, as losing issues outnumbered gainers 64 to 22. The Hang Seng TECH Index lost 0.8% on the day, while the Mainland Properties Index fell 0.5%.Leading the upside was EV-maker BYD, gaining 5% on reports of strong sales, while JD Health International declined 9.4%.On the mainland, the Shanghai Composite rose 0.1 % to 3,988.56.On the other regional exchanges, the S. Korean KOSPI fell 0.9%; the Taiwan TWSE inclined 0.1%; the Australian ASX 200 declined 0.4%, and the Singapore Straits Times Index fell 0.1%. In late trading in Mumbai, the Sensex was down 1%The MSCI All Country Asia Pacific Index fell 0.9% on the day.

Hang SengNikkei 225Shanghai Composite
Asia

S&P Sees Divergence in Asian Tech Firms' Cost Absorption Ability Amid Middle East Conflict

The Middle East conflict reveals gaps in the capacity of Asian technology companies to buffer against increased costs, S&P Global Ratings said in a Monday release.The rating agency considers high-end chip producers as faring well when increasing prices, backed by favorable demand and solid investment in AI data centers.However, consumer electronics have the weakest ability to pass through costs, while electronics manufacturers would also be exposed to dampened demand under a protracted war, S&P said.In S&P's base-case scenario, under which the Strait of Hormuz's closure eases in April, its rated technology firms in the region have solid financial ability to cushion against the impacts, credit analyst Cathy Lai said.A prolonged conflict would hit larger tech firms' supply chain and impact electronic product makers' margins and demand, Lai said.Most producers, as well as logistics companies, will be vulnerable under disruption to power supply and some key raw materials, S&P said.Regions reliant on liquefied natural gas and oil imports from Qatar and other Middle Eastern countries house most advanced semiconductor manufacturers, with Taiwan being the most vulnerable, the rating agency said.For crucial raw materials, helium is the most susceptible given its use in semiconductor manufacturing, although S&P believes leading companies have ample helium inventory to offset near-term risk.Companies with solid supply chains and investment in the AI market will potentially retain their credit profiles, while those dependent on commoditized consumer segments will see greater pressure, Lai said.

ASX 200Hang SengNikkei 225Shanghai Composite^SZSE
Asia

Chinese Rare-Earth Companies Finish High on Increases in Q2 Prices

Chinese rare-earth companies saw spikes in their closing prices on Monday following an increase in their second-quarter product prices.Inner Mongolia Baotou Steel Union (SHA:600010) finished 5% higher, while China Northern Rare Earth Group High-Tech (SHA:600111) closed at 1% higher.The companies said their rare earth concentrates were priced at 38,804 yuan per ton, according to separate Saturday filings with the Shanghai bourse.The increases come as Beijing applied retaliatory export curbs following tariffs by U.S. President Donald Trump, according to a separate Bloomberg report Monday.

Shanghai Composite^SZSESHA:600010
International

Asia Week Ahead: GDP Growth; Trade Data; and Inflation Prints

For the week ahead in Asia, markets will be focused on a slate of monthly data that will help investors assess how the Middle East conflict is feeding into economic conditions across the region.The week opens Monday with New Zealand's services sector survey and India's March inflation print, as well as a scheduled speech by the Bank of Japan's governor that could offer clues on the timing of a possible rate hike.Attention then shifts Tuesday to China's trade figures and a monetary policy decision in Singapore, alongside business and consumer confidence readings from Australia and industrial production data from Japan.Midweek brings trade and labor market data from India and South Korea, while Thursday is headlined by China's first-quarter GDP report and a broad batch of activity indicators.Friday rounds off the week with Malaysia's preliminary first-quarter GDP and inflation data, as well as Singapore's March trade numbers, including non-oil exports.Here's what to watch in the week ahead.MONDAY, April 13The week kicked off with a report indicating New Zealand's services sector shrank for the third consecutive month as the conflict in the Middle East impacted consumer confidence.The BusinessNZ Performance of Services Index for March came in at 46.0, down 1.6 points from February and 6.6 points lower than the long-term average of 52.8."So poor was the PSI reading that our combined PMI/PSI indicator is suggesting the economy could soon be contracting," said Stephen Toplis, BNZ's head of research.Outside of New Zealand, markets will be on the look out for India's March inflation print.A consensus compiled by Trading Economics indicated that the pace of price increase may have quickened during the month to around 3.5% year on year from the 3.2% recorded in February.The March print will give observers the first real look on how the Indian economy is faring after war broke out in the Middle East.While overall inflation is expected to rise, core inflation--which excludes the impact of some items--is likely to clock in at below 4%, giving the Reserve Bank of India room to shy away from a hawkish stance near term, economists at DBS said, the Wall Street Journal reported.Meanwhile, markets will also be closely following a scheduled speech by Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda on the possible timing of a rate hike. The central bank is reportedly considering a rate hike this month to counter price pressures from the Iran war.Elsewhere, Indonesia reported a 6.5% annual rise in retail sales during February, quickening from the 5.7% growth witnessed a month prior.TUESDAY, April 14China's trade figures will capture headlines Tuesday.The world's second-largest economy could report a trade surplus of $112 billion in March, higher than the $91 billion captured in February, according to a consensus compiled by Trading Economics.Despite the rising surplus, economists at ING said they expect March export growth to moderate from the figures seen in the first two months of the year.A monetary policy decision and an advance estimate of GDP growth in the first quarter is expected in Singapore.Unlike other economies, Singapore tweaks its currency exchange rate rather than its domestic interest rates to control inflation. While the Monetary Authority of Singapore has not adjusted its policy since April 2025, it is now expected to tighten the valves in response to the Middle East conflict, according to a survey of economists compiled by Bloomberg, CNA Digital reported.Meanwhile, Singapore's economy likely slowed during the first three months of the year due to a pullback in manufacturing activity, the WSJ reported, citing Barclays economists.The city-state's economy expanded 6.9% year-on-year in the final quarter of 2025 and by 5% during the entirety of the year.In January, the city-state had upgraded its 2026 forecast to a range of 2% to 4%, with growth outlook raised to 3%. However, Deputy Prime Minister Gan Kim Yong said in March the government will reassess its GDP forecast following the U.S.-Israeli attack on Iran.A pair of reports covering business and consumer confidence in Australia are expected.Consumer confidence was near the bottom of its 18-month range in March, and the April survey was shaping up for a bigger drop as consumers reckoned with the implications of the conflict in the Middle East, the National Australia Bank said in a preview.Meanwhile, the March business confidence report should capture the flow through impacts from the energy crisis and higher borrowing costs in Australia, Westpac said."Widespread supply disruptions and soaring energy costs are likely to be reflected in higher business input and output costs," the firm said in a note.Japan's industrial production stats will also be in focus on Tuesday, while India will release wholesale price inflation data the same day.WEDNESDAY, April 15A slew of macro data from India and South Korea will be in the news Wednesday.India will report its trade figures for March which could show a widening of the trade deficit to $32.75 billion from $27.1 billion in the month prior, according to a consensus compiled by Trading Economics.Labor data, due the same day, could show unemployment climbed to 5.1% from 4.9% in February, according to another Trading Economics consensus estimate.South Korea will similarly report March labor data and export and import prices.Unemployment in South Korea has been on a downward trajectory since December when it stood at 3.3%. The most recent reading was of 2.9%.Japan's machinery orders stats are also scheduled for release Wednesday.THURSDAY, April 16Markets will turn their attention to a flurry of data coming in from China, including the closely watched GDP growth rate for the first quarter of the year.Analysts place China's Q1 GDP growth rate at 4.9% year on year, rising from the 4.5% recorded in the closing months of 2025, the WSJ reported. Economists at DBS attributed the expected rise in growth to a jump in overseas demand for Chinese goods, the WSJ added.The GDP release will be accompanied by China's house price index, offering an insight into new home prices across 70 cities that markets use as a benchmark. New prices are expected to stay in negative territory, though any moderation would be viewed positively, economists at ING said.Additional releases will include China's industrial production data, retail sales figures, and unemployment stats."Other than industrial production, which we expect to grow around 5.5% YoY, economic activity data is likely to remain rather soft in March," ING said in a preview.Labor data from Australia is also expected Thursday.The National Australia Bank expects the jobless rate to stay at 4.3%, with employment rising by 25,000. "While the survey period captures the escalation in the Middle East conflict, it is likely too early to see a response to this reflected in the data," NAB said in a note.The Reuters Tankan Index for April, a key gauge of Japanese business confidence, will be due the same day.FRIDAY, April 17The week rounds off with Malaysia's preliminary GDP growth rate figures for the first quarter of the year.Economists at ANZ expect first-quarter growth to ease to 5.3% from the 6.3% recorded in the final quarter of 2025, the WSJ reported. Despite stronger agriculture output, the Malaysian economy saw industrial and retail activity moderate during the opening months of 2026, the report said, citing ANZ.Malaysia's inflation data is also expected Friday, with Trading Economics forecasting the pace of price increase to quicken to 1.8% year on year from the 1.4% recorded in February.Singapore reports March trade data, including non-oil exports, the same day.

ASX 200^BSE^JKSEFTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCIKOSPINikkei 225^NSE^NZ50Shanghai Composite^STI^SZSE
Asia

Chinese Stocks Muted Amid Failed US-Iran Talks, Improved GDP Outlook

Chinese equities closed flat, mainly in positive territory, slightly rebounding from earlier losses due to threats of the U.S. blocking the Strait of Hormuz.The Shanghai Composite Index moderately rose to close Monday's trade at 3,988.56. The Shenzhen Component Index added 0.7%, or 98.39 points, to 14,407.86.Investors are still cautious as talks between the U.S. and Iran crumbled, prompting President Donald Trump to announce an immediate naval blockade of the strait, which is a critical global oil passageway.Despite the growing Middle East tensions, the Asian Development Bank, or ADB, lifted its economic forecast for China for the year, bringing its gross domestic product 4.6% from the previous forecast of 4.3%. The ADB attributed the improved outlook on the government's support for high-tech innovation and continued exports as China leans towards non-U.S. global trade partners.In corporate news, Haisco Pharmaceutical (SHE:002653) soared after granting AbbVies exclusive rights for Nav1.8 inhibitors.Jinan Shengquan (SHA:605589) rose 2.7% amid plans to issue convertible bonds worth 2.50 billion yuan.

Shanghai Composite^SZSESHA:605589SHE:002653

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