MSCI Trims China’s Index Presence by Removing DozenAbhishek Vishnoi and Sangmi Chas of Stocks

MSCI Inc. continues to cull China stocks from its indexes, setting the stage for a further drop in the nation’s share of a key emerging-market benchmark.

The index provider said it will remove 60 stocks from the MSCI China Index this month, following 56 deletions in May and 66 in February, the highest tally in at least two years. At the end of July, China represented 22.33% of the Emerging Markets gauge.

The changes, effective after the close on Aug. 30, will also apply to the MSCI All Country World Index. Stocks slated for removal include Ganfeng Lithium Group Co. and Flat Glass Group Co.

EM world

MSCI’s changes underscore the increasingly grim prospects for the world’s second-largest economy, as Chinese shares risk losing their outsized presence in emerging market portfolios to peers such as India and Taiwan.

The deletions may further increase the downside for China’s already battered market, with index-tracking funds forced to sell these shares. The largest such fund, the US-listed iShares MSCI China ETF, is part of the at least $7.9 billion tracking the MSCI China Index.

These deletions will help “even the playing field for EM investors,” said Marvin Chen, a strategist with Bloomberg Intelligence in Hong Kong. “The large weighting and impact of China earlier may be more evenly distributed to other markets such as India, Korea and Taiwan.”