Elderly investors groused about who is to blame for falling share prices, playing cards and drinking tea in the public trading halls of Beijing and Shanghai brokerages as they clustered beneath frozen or blank screens.
“It’s good for us to get together and complain together,” said an investor who gave his surname as Feng but preferred to go by “a heartbroken Chinese investor”.
Many of the bickering pensioners are regulars. For them, communal trading halls function as social gathering spots as well as places to buy and sell stocks — and to carry their sometimes voluble arguments out into the streets.
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