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China Stocks: What to Know Before the Open on November 17, 2025 — PBOC’s ¥800bn Liquidity Boost Meets Global Risk-Off

Quick take: Mainland A‑shares reopen Monday at 9:30 a.m. CST with a powerful domestic liquidity tailwind from the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), but sentiment has to work through Friday’s global tech-led selloff, soft October macro prints, and persistent pressure from the property downturn.


1) Big policy swing: PBOC to inject ¥800 billion today

China’s central bank said it will conduct an ¥800 billion (≈US$113bn) outright reverse‑repo operation on Monday, Nov 17 (six‑month tenor), a net injection of ¥500 billion after November maturities. It’s the latest in a series of sizable OMOs designed to keep liquidity “reasonably ample.” Markets will parse bidding results for the implied funding cost and any read‑through for near‑term credit conditions. The State Council of China

Why it matters: Since May, the seven‑day reverse‑repo rate has been the main policy signal; it was cut by 10 bps to 1.40% effective May 8, reinforcing an easing bias. Today’s large OMO should cushion opening‑bell volatility and support brokers, high‑beta cyclicals, and policy‑sensitive ETFs.


2) Macro check: October data mixed, property still drags

  • Industrial production rose 4.9% y/y in October, while retail sales slowed to 2.9% y/y and fixed‑asset investment (Jan–Oct) fell 1.7% y/y; real‑estate investment slumped 14.7% over the same period. CPI inched back to +0.2% y/y; PPI deflation narrowed. The manufacturing PMI slid to 49.0, with non‑manufacturing at 50.1. Net: growth is positive but uneven, and domestic demand remains patchy.
  • Home prices: New‑home prices fell 0.5% m/m in October—the fastest monthly drop in a year—underscoring ongoing property‑sector stress and the case for targeted easing. Property‑linked A‑shares could remain headline‑sensitive at the open.

3) Overnight cues: global risk‑off vs A‑share proxies

  • Global backdrop: U.S. equities dropped sharply on Friday, Nov 14, as tech selling deepened and hopes for a December Fed cut faded—an unwelcome lead for Asia at the start of the week.
  • A‑share proxy:FTSE China A50 futures (SGX) fell ~1.33% on Friday (Nov 14), flagging a softer setup into Monday’s call auction—though today’s PBOC liquidity could blunt follow‑through.
  • Rates & FX context: China’s 10‑year government bond yield hovered around 1.81%–1.82% late last week, while USD/CNY was near 7.096—benchmarks traders use to gauge risk appetite and policy stance into the open.

4) Today’s market calendar & micro catalysts

  • Opening times: Mainland cash equities (Shanghai & Shenzhen) run 9:30–11:30 / 13:00–15:00 CST with opening/closing auctions around those sessions. Expect price discovery to hinge on auction depth given the fresh policy news.
  • This week: The Loan Prime Rate (LPR) fixing is due later this week; after holding steady last month, many houses expect no change in November amid incremental easing via liquidity tools rather than headline rate cuts.
  • MSCI index rebalancing: The November MSCI review takes effect at the close on Nov 24. Trading desks often pre‑position the week prior, so watch turnover and end‑of‑day flows in likely add/delete names.

5) Sectors & stocks to watch at the open

Tech / AI:

  • Baidu unveiled new AI processors and supercomputing products last week—an incremental positive for China’s on‑shore AI supply chain narrative. Monitor STAR‑Board AI infrastructure names and local GPU/EDA plays for sympathy moves.
  • Geopolitics watch: A White House memo reported by media alleged Alibaba assists Chinese military targeting—an allegation the company denies. While Alibaba isn’t A‑listed, the headline can sway broader China tech sentiment and e‑commerce peers.

Property complex:

  • With home prices falling at the fastest pace in a year and real‑estate investment weak, developers, building materials, and home‑appliance names remain event‑driven. Traders will watch for any new local easing moves (mortgage down‑payments, purchase restrictions) before the market close.

Consumer & e‑commerce:

  • Singles’ Day takeaways were “muted” on sentiment—even if some platform metrics improved—so discretionary names may trade on guidance rather than headline GMV figures. Investing.com

Brokers & ETFs:

  • Large OMOs often support brokerages (turnover up) and broad ETF buying. Keep an eye on on‑shore ETFs tracking the CSI 300 and STAR 50 as early gauges of policy‑led risk appetite. (Context: Monday’s ¥800bn injection.)

6) Trading playbook for the opening hour

  1. Auction depth & follow‑through: Compare opening auction prints with Friday’s A50 futures decline; if turnover spikes alongside breadth improvement, the PBOC tailwind is gaining traction.
  2. Rates & FX tells: A dip in the 10‑year CGB yield or a steadier yuan typically coincides with better equity risk appetite; sharp CNY weakness would argue for fading early strength.
  3. Northbound interest: Watch Stock Connect net northbound flows as a real‑time confidence barometer; strong AM‑session inflows often correlate with sustained index gains (even absent new headlines).
  4. Policy tape bombs: Monitor for any OMO result details, local housing easings, or regulator comments; these can change sector leadership intra‑day.

7) The bottom line

  • Supportive: A rare ¥800bn outright repo today is a clear, near‑term positive for market liquidity and risk appetite into the open.
  • Challenging: The global risk‑off backdrop, soft October consumption, and property price declines keep a lid on enthusiasm—making Monday’s tape a tug‑of‑war between policy support and macro headwinds.
  • What to watch next:LPR later this week (likely unchanged), MSCI rebalancing into Nov 24, and any incremental housing easing. These will shape whether Monday’s liquidity pop builds into a more durable trend.

Practical details for readers

  • Mainland trading hours (local):9:30–11:30 & 13:00–15:00 CST (auctions at 9:15–9:25 and 14:57–15:00). Plan liquidity around the open, pre‑lunch ramp, and closing auction.

This article is for information only and not investment advice. Markets are volatile; always consider your risk tolerance and time horizon.

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