Chinesische Investoren sehen Sie sich die Preise von Aktien vor einem Bildschirm, der aktienindizes und die Preise der Aktien (rot für Preis steigt und Grün für pric
Chinese investors look at prices of shares in front of a screen displaying stock indices and prices of shares (red for price rising and green for price falling) at a stock brokerage house in Fuyang city, east China's Anhui province, 6 November 2015. China's stocks rallied further on Friday (6 November 2015) after the benchmark index entered a bull market. Gains were led by brokerages, technology and consumer companies. The Shanghai Composite Index rose for a third day, adding 1.91 percent to 3590.03 at the close. Turnover continued to surge after the stocks gauge completed a 20 percent rebound from the August low on Thursday, with trading volumes 40 percent percent higher than the 30-day average. Citic Securities Co. added to a 24 percent rally this week. The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index slid 0.2 percent as investors awaited a crucial U.S. payrolls report. The Shanghai gauge has climbed 5.9 percent this week, while the H-shares gauge advanced 1.9 percent. Most of the gains came on Wednesday after the nation's central bank unintentionally sparked a surge in stocks by publishing five-month-old comments from governor Zhou Xiaochuan that said a link between exchanges in Shenzhen and Hong Kong would start in 2015. Monetary easing has also supported stocks as well as signs that unprecedented state measures such as preventing major shareholders from selling shares and curbing short selling have stemmed the $5 trillion market rout.