Hairuo Jin

Navigating Entrapment: Scams, Mistrust, and Speculation in the Social Life of Retail Stock Market Investors in China

ABSTRACT: This article examines the interplay of mistrust, entrapment, and speculation in the social life of retail investors (sanhus) in China’s stock market. Through ethnographic research, it explores how sanhus navigate a financial landscape rife with scams, regulatory uncertainty, and institutional biases that favour powerful market actors. Far from being passive victims, these investors develop strategies to mitigate risk, leveraging mistrust as a tool for negotiation and survival. The stock market, often perceived as a “trap,” fosters a precarious sociality in which relationships remain tentative, and exchanges are framed by the anticipation of deception. Building on theories of financialisation and entrapment, this study highlights how sanhus’ engagement in the market extends beyond economic calculation, shaping their social interactions and perceptions of state intervention. The article contributes to anthropological discussions on mistrust, demonstrating its productive role in structuring financial participation and everyday social dynamics. By revealing how sanhus operate within and against a system designed to exploit them, this study challenges the notion of retail investors as irrational actors and instead highlights how navigating systemic constraints enables sanhus to form a social life of mistrust with vigilant and resilient tactics.  KEYWORDS: economic anthropology, mistrust, entrapment, stock market, China, retail investors.