China said on Tuesday it was "fully confident" of hitting its growth target this year but held off announcing more stimulus measures, leaving markets disappointed.
Beijing has struggled to reignite business activity as officials target around five percent expansion, which analysts say is optimistic given the numerous headwinds, from a prolonged housing crisis to sluggish consumption and local government debt.
All eyes were on a news conference led by Zheng Shanjie, head of China's National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), on Tuesday, and investors hoped Beijing would unveil more economy-boosting policies.
But Zheng and colleagues refrained from laying out any new stimulus, instead reiterating that "the fundamentals of our country's economic development have not changed".
"We are fully confident in achieving the goals of economic and societal development for the year," the top economic planner said.
"We are also fully confident in maintaining stable, healthy and sustainable development," he added.
Markets in mainland China had soared 10 percent on the opening as traders resumed a blistering rally after a week-long break hoping for more measures from Beijing.
But they pared those gains as the news conference progressed with few concrete details and Shanghai ended the morning just 4.8 percent higher, while Shenzhen added 7.7 percent. Hong Kong tumbled more than five percent.
Investors had been racing back into stocks on the mainland and Hong Kong since authorities began announcing a raft of stimulus measures to reverse a long period of tepid economic growth.
Many of the measures unveiled so far have been aimed at the flagging housing market, long a key driver of growth but now mired in a prolonged debt crisis exemplified by the fates of developers like Evergrande.
To that end, Beijing's central bank has slashed interest for one-year loans to financial institutions, cut the amount of cash lenders must keep on hand, and pushed to lower rates on existing mortgages.
"With the continued release of various policies, particularly incremental packages, market expectations have recently significantly improved," Zheng said Tuesday.
Several cities -- including the financial crucibles of Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen -- have also further eased restrictions on buying homes.
Analysts hoped officials would unveil further fiscal support measures such as trillions of yuan in bond issuances and policies to boost consumption.
They warn that deep reforms to the economic system to relieve the debt crisis in the property sector and boost domestic demand are needed if Beijing is serious about resolving the fundamental obstacles to growth.
"The Chinese economy isn't in a crisis and (Beijing) doesn't need to announce a large fiscal spending package for the remainder of 2024 to help China hit its GDP target," China Beige Book's Shehzad Qazi said.
"The real question is whether Beijing will announce a multi-phase spending program for 2025 and beyond that includes addressing the structural problems holding back the economy's transition to being consumption driven," he added.