The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Lenovo is China’s hottest tech stock

Company stages defiant comeback after Hang Seng rejection

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HONG KONG: What was the world’s worst technology stock only months ago has become China’s hottest, staging a defiant comeback since it was booted off Hong Kong’s benchmark gauge.

Lenovo Group Ltd has seen its shares surge 42% in the nearly five months since the announceme­nt of its removal from the Hang Seng Index – an increase that beats every other Chinese technology stock during the same period while outperform­ing the broader Hang Seng index that this month slumped into a bear market.

The rapid reboot of the PC manufactur­er’s shares is a welcome surprise for investors who had grown accustomed to Lenovo being the world’s worst-performing technology stock, plunging 56% between March 2013 and April as it repeatedly missed turnaround targets for its embattled smartphone business.

“Lenovo’s fundamenta­ls are having a rebound, which surprised some investors,” said Linus Yip, a strategist with First Shanghai Securities.

“The sales recovery story is particular­ly attractive in a bear market, at a time when a tech darling such as Tencent Holdings Ltd. is facing growth bottleneck­s.”

Tencent has fallen 20% since Lenovo was removed from the Hang Seng gauge in June.

Driving the rebound is a revival in global PC shipments, which saw the fastest growth in six years in the three months ended June as Lenovo reported a better-than-expected net income of US$77mil during the period.

Its loss-making smartphone unit, which used to be a big concern to investors, almost halved its losses on-year while it is benefiting from strong sales and shipment momentum in the global server business.

Short sellers are getting burned as the stock soars: bearish interest fell to just 5.6% of free float from 16% in May, which was the highest in at least 12 years.

Analysts have lifted their average target price by 20% since the day before Lenovo’s quarterly results, the second-biggest increase among all MSCI China Index members, according to Bloomberg data.

Lenovo’s sales recovery comes at a good time for China as it looks to domestic brands amid a deepening trade war with the US, says Yip.

“It was a quiet stock for a few years until recently. And the upside may not be fully priced in yet.”

 ?? – AP ?? Stock rally: Lenovo headquarte­rs in Beijing. Lenovo Group Ltd. has seen its shares surge 42 % in the nearly five months since the announceme­nt of its removal from the Hang Seng Index - an increase that beats every other Chinese technology stock during the same period.
– AP Stock rally: Lenovo headquarte­rs in Beijing. Lenovo Group Ltd. has seen its shares surge 42 % in the nearly five months since the announceme­nt of its removal from the Hang Seng Index - an increase that beats every other Chinese technology stock during the same period.

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