Several major announcements were made over the weekend. How will the A-shares perform this Monday? Is China Securities Finance planning another one-day show, or are they really preparing for sustained efforts this time?
Let’s take a look at what’s happened:
For brokerages, regulators mentioned they would moderately relax capital requirements and leverage limits. The message is clear—stop the price wars and start competing on value.
Top executives at fund companies are also under scrutiny. This year, chairmen and senior management must use at least 30% of their performance-based pay to buy their own funds. That’s a tough move, making them experience their own products firsthand.
It gets even tougher: fund managers whose performance has lagged the benchmark by more than 10% over the past three years and who have posted losses? Their salaries will be cut by 30%. This operation shows they mean business.
There’s also news on insurance funds. The National Financial Regulatory Administration has adjusted risk factors. For holdings of the CSI 300 and the CSI Dividend Low Volatility 100 Index for more than three years, the risk factor drops from 0.3 to 0.27; for regular STAR Market stocks held over two years, it drops from 0.4 to 0.36.
How big of a wave will all this make? We’ll find out on Monday.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
15 Likes
Reward
15
6
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
SandwichDetector
· 16h ago
Monday is likely to be volatile, so don't expect these policies to have an immediate effect
I really dare to let fund managers buy their own products, this trick is really ruthless, it seems that they are determined to rectify this stall
30% salary cut? Ha, those managers who have been losing money in a row should panic this time
The risk factor adjustment of insurance funds is not large, and I feel that the sincerity is average
Securities never fight an uncertain battle, this time it is mostly a tentative operation, and the real market depends on the follow-up
View OriginalReply0
VibesOverCharts
· 12-08 23:56
Haha, the regulators are really pulling out the big guns this time. Fund managers buying their own products—now that's real confidence.
---
China Securities Finance is at it again, let's see how things play out on Monday.
---
A 30% pay cut? Some fund managers surely can't sit still now, haha.
---
With the adjustment of risk factors for insurance funds, is the CSI 300 about to see another round of speculation?
---
It's only real trust if you put your own money in—everything else is just talk.
---
Before the market even opens on Monday, I already know what's going to happen—up first, then a dump.
---
After this series of policy moves, the days of market manipulation might really be coming to an end.
---
But seriously, does the pay cut clause actually help retail investors in any meaningful way?
---
Feels like they're just injecting adrenaline into the market—the real question is how long it can last.
View OriginalReply0
HalfPositionRunner
· 12-08 10:09
Cutting fund managers' salaries by 30% is truly a bold move—bringing their own wallets into the game. This time, the regulators are really not playing around.
View OriginalReply0
NestedFox
· 12-07 10:52
Ha, fund managers are being forced to buy their own products. Now they've really boarded the "pirate ship."
If there's going to be sustained momentum, we'll have to see if others follow up. Can just these few policies turn things around? Let's wait until Monday.
A 30% pay cut is basically forcing people to either quit or work themselves to the bone.
Lowering risk factors—are good times coming for insurance funds? Not necessarily; it still depends on the market's cooperation.
Is this actually releasing good news or just another way to fleece retail investors? The trend will tell.
View OriginalReply0
DiamondHands
· 12-07 10:50
Haha, this move is really ruthless. Fund managers have to buy their own products; this is forcing them to stop messing around.
Whether it's just a one-day rally or sustained momentum is hard to say—it all depends on how the market performs on Monday. Anyway, I've had enough of cutting my losses.
With the risk factor for insurance funds lowered, the CSI 300 can finally catch a breather, right?
It's both positive and negative news again. I can't figure out whether Monday will see a surge or a plunge.
Let's wait and see what real action China Securities Finance takes—hopefully not just empty gestures again.
View OriginalReply0
RektRecorder
· 12-07 10:29
Ha, here comes another new trick to fleece retail investors.
Fund managers didn't even dare to buy their own products before, now they're being forced to. That's what you call confidence.
Cutting salaries by 30% is really harsh, but is it the right move? Hard to say.
As soon as the insurance fund risk factors are adjusted, it's another hint to buy the dip. Whether there's a surge or a plunge on Monday depends on sentiment.
The guys at China Securities Finance Corporation never disappoint. The odds of a short-term one-day rally are still high.
But to be fair, if the benchmark underperforms by more than 10% and salaries are cut directly, those veteran fund managers who've been showing off all year are about to see their good days end.
Several major announcements were made over the weekend. How will the A-shares perform this Monday? Is China Securities Finance planning another one-day show, or are they really preparing for sustained efforts this time?
Let’s take a look at what’s happened:
For brokerages, regulators mentioned they would moderately relax capital requirements and leverage limits. The message is clear—stop the price wars and start competing on value.
Top executives at fund companies are also under scrutiny. This year, chairmen and senior management must use at least 30% of their performance-based pay to buy their own funds. That’s a tough move, making them experience their own products firsthand.
It gets even tougher: fund managers whose performance has lagged the benchmark by more than 10% over the past three years and who have posted losses? Their salaries will be cut by 30%. This operation shows they mean business.
There’s also news on insurance funds. The National Financial Regulatory Administration has adjusted risk factors. For holdings of the CSI 300 and the CSI Dividend Low Volatility 100 Index for more than three years, the risk factor drops from 0.3 to 0.27; for regular STAR Market stocks held over two years, it drops from 0.4 to 0.36.
How big of a wave will all this make? We’ll find out on Monday.