- Hang Seng ends up 0.81% in volatile trade
- SSEC -1.82%; down 9.98% from Feb. 18 high
- CSI300 down 2.15% after flirting with gains
- Yuan swings higher against dollar after early weakness
(Recasts with Hong Kong close)
SHANGHAI, March 9 (Reuters) - Hong Kong's Hang Seng index ended a volatile session higher on Tuesday, while China's benchmark Shanghai Composite index stood on the precipice of a correction as investors wrestled with the prospect of tighter policy and a slowing economic recovery.
The drop in A-shares comes amid broad selling of global equities in conjunction with rising bond yields and fear that inflation will force central banks to withdraw from accommodative policies earlier than expected.
"Premature policy tightening may create downside risks for the economy but keeping policy accommodative for too long could cause the economy and market to overheat," said Michelle Qi, head of equity at Eastspring Investments in Shanghai.
"It will also be tricky trying to strike a balance between stabilising short-term growth and promoting structural reforms."
The Hang Seng ended the day up 0.81%, with financials rising 1.08% and providing support. The index had fallen earlier in the day as the tech sub-index slumped as much as 4.64% before regaining ground to end 0.23% lower.
"This is just some volatile trading because we have seen a huge fall over the last few sessions," said Alex Wong, director at Ample Finance Group in Hong Kong.
"The overall market is not that bad because people are just doing sector rotations ... they are not bearish on everything," he said, adding that he expected the market to stabilise.
The Shanghai Composite index was down 1.82% to 3,359.29 at the end of a session that saw it flirt with small gains. It is now down 9.98% from a multi-year high touched on Feb. 18, just shy of the 10% drop typically defined as a correction.
The blue-chip CSI300 index , which fell into a correction last week, erased a small midday rise to slump further. It touched its lowest point since Dec. 15 before closing down 2.15% at 4,971.00.
"The pace of China's economic recovery slowed...while rates have been rising continuously. Such a combination didn't bode well for equities," said Zheng Zichun, an analyst with AVIC Securities.
Zheng said mutual funds are also facing pressure to sell to handle redemptions from retail investors, and that the market correction could slow the pace of new mutual fund launches.
Investors have been forced out of popular stocks like Kweichow Moutai Co Ltd and into areas like small caps by worries about how authorities might rein in frothy valuations.
The heavyweight liquor maker itself turned around from midday gains to close 1.17% lower, following a 4.86% drop on Monday. Moutai's shares have fallen more than 26% from a Feb. 18 peak.
Despite the day's losses, foreign investors remained net buyers of A-shares through the northbound Stock Connect, according to Refinitiv data.
China's yuan also whipsawed, touching a two-and-a-half-month low before recovering all its losses to trade at 6.5235 per dollar around 0730 GMT.
(Reporting by Andrew Galbraith and Luoyan Liu; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu)