This isn’t China’s Lehman moment – yet | Linda Yueh
According to a modern version of Metternich's saying, when the US sneezes, the rest of the world catches a cold. Does the same now apply to the world's second largest economy? If China implodes, could it drag down the global economy with it?
China's stock market has fallen by about a third since the middle of July, and this week it has devalued its currency, the RMB, not once but twice, sending shockwaves through financial markets. Despite the seeming panic, so far prices have only fallen back to the same levels as at the end of March. In any case, fewer than one in 10 Chinese households invest in stocks and shares, and on average the stock market accounts for less than 15% of household wealth. So the tens of millions of small Chinese investors who play the stock market have mostly been betting relatively small amounts and haven't lost their shirts.
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