Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Panic sellers sink Hong Kong indexes

- JEANNY YU AND CHARLOTTE YANG Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Shikhar Balwani, Hideyuki Sano, Abhishek Vishnoi and Divya Balji of Bloomberg News.

Chinese stocks listed in Hong Kong had their worst day since the global financial crisis, as concerns over Beijing’s close relationsh­ip with Russia and renewed regulatory risks sparked panic selling.

The Hang Seng China Enterprise­s Index closed down 7.2% on Monday, the biggest drop since November 2008. The Hang Sang Tech Index tumbled 11% in its worst decline since the gauge was launched in July 2020, wiping out $2.1 trillion in value since a year-earlier peak.

The broad rout follows a report citing U.S. officials that Russia has asked China for military assistance for its war in Ukraine. Even as China denied the report, traders worry that Beijing’s potential overture toward Vladimir Putin could bring a global backlash against Chinese firms, even sanctions. Sentiment was also hurt by a covid-induced lockdown in the southern city of Shenzhen, a key tech hub, and the northern province of Jilin.

That comes on top of a spate of regulatory worries. Tencent Holdings is reportedly facing a possible record fine for violations of anti money-laundering rules, which pushed the stock down nearly 10% on Monday. There’s also a risk of Chinese firms delisting from the U.S., as the Securities and Exchange Commission identified some names as part of a crackdown on foreign firms that refuse to open their books to U.S. regulators.

“If the U.S. decides to impose sanctions on China in total or on individual Chinese companies doing business with Russia, that would be a concern,” said Mark Mobius, who set up Mobius Capital Partners after more than three decades at Franklin Templeton Investment­s. “The whole story is still up in the air in this case.”

Investors have reason to be jittery after several bigname funds reported significan­t losses related to Russia. BlackRock’s funds exposed to Russia have plunged by $17 billion since the war began.

On Friday, the Golden Dragon Index, which tracks American depository receipts of Chinese firms, slumped 10% for a second consecutiv­e day — something that’s never happened before in its 22-year history. It slumped 18% last week, its steepest decline since at least 2001. China’s benchmark CSI 300 Index closed 3.1% lower on Monday. The onshore yuan also fell to its weakest in a month as sentiment toward Chinese assets turned sour.

“We don’t see a major catalyst in the near term,” to help China stocks, though earnings results may create some share price volatility, said Marvin Chen, a strategist at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce. “For a material re-rating of China tech, we may need to see a shift in regulatory tone, and we didn’t get that from the recently concluded NPC meeting.”

Even amid the rout, mainland traders have continued to snap up Hong Kong stocks, though that’s proving insufficie­nt to buttress share prices. They have been net buying Hong Kong equities via the stock connect in every session since Feb. 22, loading up $1 billion on Monday, the most since January.

The historic slide in tech stocks is baffling China bulls, the number of which had grown this year as strategist­s bet on a rebound thanks to policy easing by the People’s Bank of China.

Goldman Sachs strategist­s toned down their optimism slightly on China stocks, slashing their valuation estimates for the MSCI China Index.

“We stay overweight China on well-anchored growth expectatio­ns/targets, easing policy, depressed valuations/ sentiment, and low investor positionin­g,” but lower our 12- month valuation target from 14.5 times to 12 times on changes in the global macro environmen­t and higher geopolitic­al risks, strategist­s including Kinger Lau wrote in note dated Monday. The MSCI China Index has seen its valuation more than halve from a Feb. 2021 peak. The gauge is trading at about 9 times its 12-month forward earnings estimates, versus a five-year average of 12.6.

“It’s true that the valuation is cheap but if you are desperatel­y closing your positions, valuations don’t matter,” said Yasutada Suzuki, head of emerging market investment­s at Sumitomo Mitsui Bank.

 ?? (AP/Kin Cheung) ?? People wearing face masks stand near a bank’s electronic board showing the Hong Kong share index Monday in Hong Kong.
(AP/Kin Cheung) People wearing face masks stand near a bank’s electronic board showing the Hong Kong share index Monday in Hong Kong.

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