Calgary Herald

Tencent’s shares sell-off of $143 billion eclipses Facebook’s market value rout

- KANA NISHIZAWA AND JEANNY YU

If you thought the slump in U.S. technology stocks was bad, take a look at Tencent Holdings Ltd.

The Chinese internet giant has tumbled 25 per cent from its January peak, erasing about US$143 billion of market value. That’s the biggest wipeout of shareholde­r wealth worldwide, as measured from the date of each stock’s 52-week high. Facebook Inc., the F in the FANG block of mega-cap U.S. tech shares, is the second-biggest loser with a US$136 billion slump over the past three trading sessions.

Investors around the world are beginning to question whether the best days are over for technology stocks — the leaders of a nine-year boom in global equities. Tencent, Asia’s second-largest company after e-commerce behemoth Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., has also been dogged by concern that growth in its mobile-gaming unit is slowing. The stock, down 3.3 per cent on Tuesday and 9.8 per cent in July, capped its biggest monthly retreat since 2014.

“Investors are increasing­ly pricing in lower expectatio­ns for Tencent’s interim results,” said Linus Yip, a strategist at First Shanghai Securities in Hong Kong. “Overall, tech companies are facing a similar problem. They have been enjoying fast profit growth in the past few years, so it will be difficult for them to maintain similar growth in the future as the competitio­n grows and some segments are saturated.”

Tencent’s year-on-year profit growth probably slowed to 5.1 per cent in the second quarter, the weakest pace since 2012, according to analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

At least 11 brokerages cut their Tencent share-price target this month, including Credit Suisse Group AG and Morgan Stanley.

While analysts have ratcheted down their expectatio­ns, they haven’t turned bearish yet. All 51 forecaster­s tracked by Bloomberg have the equivalent of a buy recommenda­tion on Tencent’s shares, with the average price target implying a 45-per-cent gain over the next 12 months.

Whether they’re right may depend on what Tencent says in its second-quarter earnings announceme­nt on Aug. 15.

 ?? ANTHONY KWAN/BLOOMBERG FILES ?? Chinese internet giant Tencent, Asia’s second largest company, saw its stock plunge 25 per cent from its January peak, amid concerns about slowing growth in its mobile-gaming unit.
ANTHONY KWAN/BLOOMBERG FILES Chinese internet giant Tencent, Asia’s second largest company, saw its stock plunge 25 per cent from its January peak, amid concerns about slowing growth in its mobile-gaming unit.

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