China stocks drop 2.4 pct as economy worries weigh
(Adds comments, individual stocks)
* Jittery investors quick to take profits in large caps
* Bounce from U.S. presidential election fades
* Reports of infrastructure plans boost construction shares
By Claire Zhang
SHANGHAI (Reuters) - China's main stock index ended 2.44 percent lower on Thursday as worries about global recession moved to the fore, spurring profit-taking by nervous investors in financial and coal shares that had rallied the previous day.
The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index .SSEC ended at 1,717.722 points, after rising 3.16 percent on Wednesday when the announcement of Barack Obama's win in the U.S. presidential election buoyed sentiment.
Turnover in Shanghai A shares shrank to 27.0 billion yuan ($4.0 billion) from Wednesday's one-week high of 37.4 billion. Losing Shanghai A shares outnumbered gainers by 704 to 207.
U.S. stocks plummeted on Wednesday, as a fresh batch of dismal economic data underscored the massive challenges awaiting Obama's administration, while worries mounted over U.S. payrolls numbers due on Friday.
Other Asian markets also dropped on Thursday, with the index of Asia-Pacific stocks outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS losing more than 7 percent.
Some analysts said investors were turning their attention to the faltering economy as the global markets' post-election euphoria faded.
"The U.S. elections offered only a short-lived bounce. Chinese investors are jittery and ready to grab profits at any time, given the economy's gloomy outlook," said Zhang Qi, analyst at Haitong Securities.
GIVING UP GAINS
PetroChina (601857.SS), the biggest stock in the index, fell 2.82 percent to 10.33 yuan, erasing its gain on Wednesday.
Financial shares were sluggish, with Industrial & Commercial Bank of China (601398.SS), the country's biggest bank, slipping 0.81 percent to 3.69 yuan.
Haitong Securities (600837.SS) tumbled 7.68 percent to 12.86 yuan, continuing a steep slide that wiped out 35 percent of its value in the previous four sessions. A lock-up of nearly 1.3 billion of its shares will expire in mid-November, local media have reported. Continued...




