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Chinese turn U.S. embassy post into 'Wailing Wall' for stock plunge

Published 02/04/2024, 04:04 AM
Updated 02/04/2024, 01:16 PM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A general view shows the buildings of the U.S. Embassy in Beijing, China, April 21, 2021. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
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BEIJING (Reuters) - Many Chinese are venting their frustration at the slowing economy and the weak stock market in an unconventional place: the social media account of the U.S. Embassy in Beijing.

A post on Friday on protecting wild giraffes by the U.S. embassy on Weibo (NASDAQ:WB), a Chinese platform similar to X, has attracted 130,000 comments and 15,000 reposts as of Sunday, many of them unrelated to wildlife conservation.

"Could you spare us some missiles to bomb away the Shanghai Stock Exchange?" one user wrote in an repost of the article.

The Weibo account of the U.S. embassy in China "has become the Wailing Wall of Chinese retail equity investors", another user wrote.

The U.S. embassy did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

While Weibo users can publish individual posts about the market and the economy, Chinese authorities regularly block what they view as "negative" online comments when they gain traction.

The comments function on posts related to the economy or the markets on social media platforms can also be turned off, or only show selected comments, restricting channels in which people can express their opinions.

China's blue-chip CSI300 Index tumbled 6.3% last month, plumbing five-year lows, after a raft of government support measures failed to prop up confidence dented by multiple economic headwinds, including a multi-year property slump, tepid domestic consumption and deflationary pressures.

In late January, state media reported that China will take more "forceful" measures to support market confidence after a cabinet meeting chaired by Premier Li Qiang.

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Chinese authorities have since ramped up efforts to calm investors, sending out positive messages that sometimes produce the opposite effect.

On Friday, the official People's Daily published an article with the headline: "The entire country is filled with optimism".

The headline was soon mocked on Chinese social media.

A Weibo user, in an repost of the U.S. embassy's giraffe protection article, wrote: "The entire giraffe community is filled with optimism."

Latest comments

As much as it sometimes aggregates us with the information sillyness our countries freedom of speech demonstrates a power that we should not take for granted. And oh yes. God Bless America.
they should use btc as a new currency😀
go.back to sleep
The Chinese authorities will take down Weibo, cleanse all the posts, and then put it back up with a lot of dissenters in jail.
Beijing needs money. Pray for Taiwan.
Kinda looks like to me China ain't printing enough money like the US 😂
We should send them Ol' Yellen. She'd speed up their printiing presses. Send Janet, PLEASE.
The Chinese stock market (CSI 300) has TANKED 54% since the beginning of its crisis, and Western media continue to avoid giving it any real coverage to prevent panic from spreading to our economies. It's obvious that the world's second-largest economy pouring 260 billion euros into ineffective stimuli (they've already lost another 7.92% in the stock market in the little time we've had this year) has, in my opinion, a clear explanation:
As a mere investment analysis, investing in Chinese assets ahead of a very likely skyrocket in less than 12 months is a risk assumption that, in my opinion, unless a war involving NATO breaks out, will generate a lot of money for such investors next year.
Communism never works. It never has. It never will. No news here. In other news "Breaking Story! Dog Bites Man!"
It is amazing the extent to which the human mind can concoct alternative realities when presented with uncomfortable truths.
Yeah... authocratic leaders are always fun... and yet, many in the US would like one too... reflect before you elect...
lol. Thats all you get.
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