New Straits Times

HK INDEX HITS 30,000 LEVEL

Rally first time in 10 years, helped by Tencent which surges 22pc this month

-

HONG Kong’s benchmark equity gauge rose above the 30,000 level for the first time in a decade as Tencent Holdings Ltd extended its rally and Chinese financial shares climbed.

The Hang Seng Index rose as high as 30,199.69 before easing back to 29,991.49 as of 2.59pm local time, still up 0.6 per cent for the day. It closed 185.42 points, or 0.62 per cent, higher at 30,003.49.

Tencent has surged 22 per cent this month alone, taking its market value above US$500 billion (RM2.06 billion), while Ping An Insurance Group Co has jumped 23 per cent amid optimism over its digital expansion.

Hong Kong stock investors have had a rocky ride in the past 10 years, buffeted by the global financial crisis, the bursting of two different Chinese stock bubbles as well concerns over European debt. Hopes of a sustained rally in 2015 were dashed by turmoil in mainland financial markets. This year, however, has seen sustained inflows from across the border as well as dizzying rises in technology shares.

Gains in Hong Kong have helped fuel the wider regional rally in Asia, with the MSCI Asia Pacific Index headed for another record close yesterday.

There’s little sign of worry that the gains in Hong Kong will reverse any time soon. Goldman Sachs Group Inc sees the gauge climbing to 32,000 by the end of next year, according to a note dated yesterday, while Bocom Internatio­nal Holding Co’s chief strategist Hao Hong says a rally in Chinese banks, insurers and technology shares will continue amid improving asset quality and earnings growth.

“New economy companies like Tencent as well as mainland banks and insurers are major contributo­rs to this round of the rally, and the Hang Seng Index crossing above 30,000 points means that funds remain bullish on China and Chinese firms,” said Linus Yip, Hong Kong-based strategist with First Shanghai Securities.

The Hang Seng Index still looks cheap relative to European or United States benchmark gauges. The Hong Kong measure trades at 14 times reported profits, compared with more than 20 times for the Stoxx Europe 600 Index and the S&P 500 Index.

The Hong Kong gauge is increasing­ly reliant on Tencent, however, with the Chinese technology company accounting for almost a third of this year’s gains.

There are signs of caution emerging. While the Hang Seng Index is up 6.2 per cent in November, 21 of its members are down for the month, compared with 27 that are higher. Bloomberg

 ?? BLOOMBERG PIC ?? Gains in Hong Kong have helped fuel the wider regional rally in Asia, with the MSCI Asia Pacific Index headed for another record close yesterday.
BLOOMBERG PIC Gains in Hong Kong have helped fuel the wider regional rally in Asia, with the MSCI Asia Pacific Index headed for another record close yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia