Hong Kong stocks weakened obsessives in the row. Also due to US Fed meeting

Hong Kong, Asia

Shares on the Hong Kong stock exchange weakened for the seventh day in a row. That’s the longest “cord” since July. The Shanghai stock exchange also weakened, but under the influence of data suggesting a slowdown in China’s economy.

The Hong Kong stock exchange weakened in the midst of the first trading week in November. But only slightly. The Hang Seng index lost 0.3 percent, an index comprising a segment of Chinese firms then up just 0.1 percent. It is the seventh decline in a row, the longest continuous string of declines since July this year.

Indeed, investors reacted ahead of time to the US central bank‘s expected announcement of a gradual stymiing of a program to buy back bonds and mortgage liens. Indeed, the Fed came to him in the end when it said it would reduce purchasing volumes by $15 billion a month starting in mid-November.

The Shanghai exchange, which wrote down 0.2 percent as measured by the aggregate index, also weakened during Wednesday. The CSI300 index comprising only the most liquid titles, lost 0.39 percent. Here, investors responded to information that pressures to weaken overall demand in the economy are beginning to enforce in China’s economy.

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