Gulf Today

Hong Kong bourse agrees to share trading scheme with China

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Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing, operator of the Hong Kong (HK) stock exchange, said that it had agreed with China’s main bourses on the scheme for making dual-class shares available to mainland investors using Stock Connect.

Stock Connect is a cross-border investment scheme that allows offshore investors to buy onshore Chinese shares, and mainland investors to tap the Hong Kong market.

Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing got into a rare public dispute with China’s two mainland exchanges a year ago when the later blocked Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi Corporatio­n - at the time the only company listed in Hong Kong with dual-class shares - from the trading link. The Shanghai Stock Exchange said that mainland investors didn’t understand the structure well enough.

Dual-class shares - which offer one type of shares for the general public and another type for a company’s top executives and founders give the company’s management more of a say, which advocates say protect against pressure for short-term returns, but critics argue they could be abused by company insiders.

Meituan Dianping, a Chinese online food delivery-to-ticketing services firm, is the only other company listed in Hong Kong with such a structure, under Hong Kong’s new rules designed to atract tech companies. The Shanghai and Shenzhen Stock Exchanges said in statements on Friday that they were running a consultati­on on the agreed criteria for dual-class share trading until Aug.9.

Hong Kong retail sales, a key part of the city’s economy, felt a growing impact in June from mass protests, government data showed.

The government said June retail sales fell 6.7% from a year earlier, the biggest decline since February, as local consumer sentiment turned cautious and growth in visitor arrivals slowed.

Protests against a proposed extraditio­n law began in late April and widened in June, though they remained peaceful until July, when there was violence at some demonstrat­ions.

Businesses say with the violence has added to the toll on tourism and the pivotal retailing industry.

Many businesses in Hong Kong are already facing strains from China’s economic slowdown, a weak Chinese yuan and fallout from the Sino u.s. trade war.

“The near-term performanc­e of retail sales will likely remain subdued, as the weakened global and local economic outlook and other headwinds continue to weigh on consumptio­n sentiment,” a government spokesman said ater release of the June retail data.

“The recent mass demonstrat­ions, if continued, would also dent the retail business further,” he said.

Retail sales fell to HK$35.2 billion ($4.50 billion), a fith consecutiv­e month of declines. May’s decline was revised fractional­ly to 1.4%.

For 2019’s first half, retail sales fell 2.6% in value from a year earlier.

“The decline trend of retail sales industry in the coming months will be more obvious, which may fall more than 10%,” said Angela Cheng, an economist at CMB Internatio­nal Capital. “We remain pessimisti­c about Hong Kong’s future retail business.”

Hong Kong reported its economy had 0.6% annual growth in the second quarter, below the average forecast of 1.6% from five economists.

Fitch Ratings said the unrest could damage business confidence and the quality of governance. It also raised longer-term concerns about policy paralysis and erosion of the rule of law. Fitch affirmed Hong Kong’s ‘AA Plus’ rating on June 11.

Hong Kong retailers say they expect sales for July and August to drop by double-digits from a year earlier, while hoteliers are bracing for a wave of cancellati­ons. The city’s Federation of Trade Unions said hotel occupancy rates fell 20% in June year-on-year, and probably 40% in July.

Tourism, especially from mainland China, has dropped markedly. Britain, Japan, Singapore and others have issued travel alerts.

June tourist arrivals rose 8.5% from a year earlier to 5.14 million, according to the Hong Kong Tourism Board, slowing from a 19.5% rise in May. Mainland visitors increased 10.1%, accounting for 77.8% of the total. The Hong Kong Retail Management Associatio­n has changed its fullyear retail sales forecast to a double-digit fall instead of single-digit growth. PWC has revised its Hong Kong full-year retail sales forecast to a 5% drop, from a 3% fall.

Sales of jewellery, watches, clocks and valuable gits fell 17.1% on-year in June, data showed, ater a revised 2.9% drop in May.

Medicines and cosmetics fell 4.1% in June, compared with revised 1.5% growth in May. Department store sales slid 6% in June, against a 0.3% gain in May.

Hong Kong’s economy grew less than expected in the second quarter as the Us-china trade war escalated, and pressure looks set to intensify as mass anti-government protests rock the Asian financial centre.

Stock Connect is an investment scheme that allows offshore investors to buy Chinese shares and mainland investors to tap the HK market

 ?? Associated Press ?? ↑ People walk past a board, showing the stock index, outside a bank in Hong Kong.
Associated Press ↑ People walk past a board, showing the stock index, outside a bank in Hong Kong.

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