In the past 12 months, China's stock boom has created $6.5 trillion, equivalent to more than two-and-a-half times the UK economy. That sum could fund 65 Asian Infrastructure Investment Banks, buy Apple eight times or rid South Korea of its household debt problem seven times over. It amounts to the
William Pesek: China's stock bubble is choking Xi's reform plans
Subscribe to listen
$6.5 trillion sums up the value created in just 12 months of trading on Chinese stock exchanges. Photo / AFP
The stock boom, however, is interfering with these plans. The more the stock exchanges in Shanghai and Shenzhen surge, the less interest traders have in bonds. In fact, there's an ongoing run against funds that buy debt at all: Bond funds and wealth-management products have suddenly been overwhelmed, at the worst possible moment, by redemption pressures.
Municipal bond issuance is expected to reach $285 billion this year, four times as much as in 2014. Those sales will include securities that are supposed to allow local government to exchange at least $161 billion of maturing high-cost debt. But it's possible no buyers will show up, thus killing a vital reform initiative in its infancy.
The absence of active markets for corporate, mortgage- and asset-backed securities and tax-exempt IOUs offers corporate China only one real option for raising capital: initial public offerings that blow the country's stock bubble even bigger. But the absence of a healthy bond market could create wild swings not only in Chinese equities, but the country's broader economy.

Asia's 1997 crisis demonstrates how. As stocks plunged that year, the region had few liquid debt arenas, so investors felt they had no choice but to flee for other markets in order to swap their assets. The resulting capital flight toppled several Asian economies.
You'd think that with Shanghai and Shenzhen shares up 152 per cent and 185 per cent in 12 months, investors might be interested in diversifying into AAA corporate bonds. You'd be wrong. Mainland trading is being driven by sheer momentum, not rational investing strategies. Yesterday, stocks barely reacted to data showing deflation is on China's horizon; nor have they shifted in response to news that producer prices fell 4.6 per cent in May.
Part of the reason individual investors have been racing to open trading accounts - an unprecedented 4.44 million new stock accounts in the week ended May 29 alone - is they have reason to believe the Chinese government is determined to keep stocks racing upward.
Beijing bears some responsibility for the stock market bubble. Part of the reason individual investors have been racing to open trading accounts - an unprecedented 4.44 million new stock accounts in the week ended May 29 alone - is they have reason to believe the Chinese government is determined to keep stocks racing upward. Beijing has been considering allowing brokerages to roll over margin trading contracts, a sign it wants shares even higher.
China has played host to financial bubbles before, including the property and credit bubbles that Beijing blessed in the aftermath of the global financial crisis. But the stock surge is arguably the most dangerous one yet, as hundreds of millions of mainland investors leave the country's most pressing economic needs entirely neglected.
China's ailing bond markets has made it more difficult for Xi to repair regional-government balance sheets. They may also sap the government's confidence when it comes to tolerating the big debt defaults needed to chasten runaway borrowing.
Beijing could always curtail its support for equities, of course. That might increase demand for bonds might increase and invigorate Xi's plans for a more vibrant and mature financial system. But, for now, Chinese authorities still seem content to continue filling the punchbowl - and traders seem more than content to keep drinking from it.
William Pesek, a Bloomberg View columnist based in Tokyo, writes on economics, markets and politics in the Asia-Pacific region.
- Bloomberg