Here's what we know about the rebound in Chinese stocks this week

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Locals wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) line up to enter a specialized hotel for medical observation and quarantine in Zhengzhou city on Nov. 1, 2022.

Vcg | Visual China Group | Getty Images

BEIJING — Chinese stocks rallied this week as investors hoped Beijing would soon relax its stringent Covid policy.

The Shanghai composite gained 5% during the week. The Hang Seng Index notched weekly gains of well over 8%, bouncing back from 13-year lows hit in the last two weeks.

The Chinese government has yet to announce any official policy change. Covid-related restrictions on travel, regular virus testing requirements and other measures generally remained just as tight.

However, the stock rally that accelerated Friday followed multiple unconfirmed rumors of a coming Covid policy change.

“The rally that we saw this morning was primarily triggered by the hope for reopening to happen earlier than expected,” Zhiwei Zhang, president and chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management, said Friday on CNBC’s “Capital Connection.”

Zhang pointed to a closed-door speech Friday morning by a chief scientist at the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention that suggested a transition away from zero-Covid policy could happen soon.

CNBC was unable to verify comments made in the speech. The disease control center and National Health Commission did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Chinese financial media Cailian Press reported that officials would hold a press conference Saturday afternoon at the National Health Commission building on virus control and prevention measures.

The controls and continued Covid outbreaks have remained a drag on China’s economy, which grew by just 3% in the first three quarters of the year from a year ago. Economists have cut their forecasts for growth next year on expectations the restrictions persist, while the rest of the world has shifted to a “live with Covid” approach.

On Monday, mainland China did mark the end of a period of heightened Covid restrictions due to the Mid-Autumn Festival in September, the National Holiday in early October and the ruling Chinese Communist Party’s 20th National Congress in late October.

This week, some official descriptions of Covid included notable mentions of how the virus was “self-limiting” and controllable.

However, China’s Communist Party newspaper People’s Daily maintained that isolation was still necessary.

The National Health Commission also affirmed its adherence to what’s officially called the dynamic zero-Covid policy.

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