Hong Kong stock index tumbles the most in two weeks, weighed down by Tencent’s earnings miss and US rout

  • The Hang Seng Index tumbled 2.3 per cent to 20,179.30 on Thursday morning
  • The Hang Seng Tech Index sank 3.4 per cent, while the mainland’s Shanghai Composite Index slipped 0.1 per cent amid the city’s Covid-19 lockdown

Hong Kong’s key stock index slumped by the most in two weeks, weighed down by a 6 per cent slump in its top constituent, after Tencent Holdings missed its earnings estimates, while sentiment in the broader market worsened amid the biggest declines in US equities in two years.

The Hang Seng Index tumbled 2.3 per cent to 20,179.30 at the noon break on Thursday, heading for the steepest one-day decline since May 6. The Hang Seng Tech Index sank 3.4 per cent, while the mainland’s Shanghai Composite Index lost 0.1 per cent amid the city’s Covid-19 lockdown.

Tencent plunged 6.6 per cent to HK$341.40, making it one of the biggest drags on the benchmark gauge. The operator of the omnipresent Chinese super app, WeChat, posted no growth in revenue in the first quarter and a 51 per cent decline in net income. The disappointing result reflected the drawn-out effect of China‘s year-long regulatory crackdown and the fallouts of the most severe Covid-19 flare-up since the Wuhan outbreak in 2019.

“Its earnings will continue to be under pressure in the short term as a result of the headwind from the macroeconomy and the ravaging from the pandemic in some parts of China,” said Ren Jie, an analyst at Citic Securities in Beijing.

Citic Securities cut its earnings forecasts for Tencent this year by 6.3 per cent and for 2023 by 5.9 per cent.

Tencent is the fourth-largest stock on Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index, with a 7.6 per cent weighting. Its decline spilled over to affect other tech giants.

Alibaba Group Holding, the owner of the Post, sank 6.1 per cent to HK$84.55 while Meituan lost 3.2 per cent to HK$166.50 and NetEase shed 2.8 per cent to HK$148.30.

Traders may have shifted their focus to corporate earnings from the regulatory front. China’s regulatory curb appeared to be relenting, after Vice-Premier Liu He adopted a positive tone this week to affirm the role of internet platform companies in China’s economy. Still, the result of more than a year of regulatory clampdown is wending its way into woeful numbers in corporate earnings, putting the Hang Seng Tech Index’s 20 per cent rebound on the back foot.

Sentiment also soured in other markets in Asia, which all fell after the S&P 500 index dropped by the most since June 2020 on earnings concerns. A flurry of disappointing corporate results and hawkish comments by the Federal Reserve fuelled concerns that runaway inflation will erode margins and pave the way for faster interest rate increases, which weigh on stocks and hurt economic growth.

Some 52 of the 66 members on the Hang Seng Index headed south on Tuesday. Leading the decliners, Techtronic Industries plummeted 6.9 per cent to HK$99.25 and Shenzhou International Group Holdings retreated 6.7 per cent to HK$104.20.

Author: Zhang Shidong, SCMP

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