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Forbes
Forbes
Business
Brendan Ahern, Contributor

Regulation, ‘Unnamed Sources’ Weigh On Internet Stocks

Chengdu, Old and New (Temples, Shopping District, and Modern City Center) - Chengdu, China getty

Key News

Asian equities followed the US’ Friday underperformance overnight. Hong Kong-listed internet stocks were hit today as the Ministry of Industrial and Information Technology (MIIT) reiterated that internet companies cannot block competitors on their platforms. This should not have been news as we knew this already, but, combined with a Financial Times article stating that Ant Group would need to separate their loan business from their mobile payment business in a new entity, took the wind out of the space. It is worth noting that the FT article only quoted “unnamed sources”. I’m surprised investors haven’t become more skeptical of such articles. Last week, a false report that Didi would be taken over by the government was disseminated in the US.

The most interesting part of the Financial Times article was how well Ant Group is doing (see revenue chart below).

Ant revenue chart FT

Just hours after Biden and Xi’s phone call, we heard that the Biden Administration would begin to examine US-China trade issues.

Tencent saw a small net sale from Mainland investors via Southbound Connect though the company did buy back stock again.

Mainland markets saw value sectors outperform growth sectors as weakness in semiconductors continues to weigh on the STAR Board. It is important to note that STAR Board’s weakness is not due to the launch of the new stock exchange in Beijing. The new exchange will focus on small and medium-sized enterprises, replacing existing OTC markets, rather than science and technology stocks. According to an institutional broker, the new Beijing Exchange will have 66 stocks with a combined market cap of $29 billion versus the STAR Board’s 332 stocks with a combined market cap of $772 billion.

Metal stocks such as lithium and cobalt continue to do well in both Hong Kong and Mainland China. Foreign investors were net sellers of Mainland stocks after a very strong week last week.

Country performance KraneShares


MSCI China All Shares Index KraneShares


Stock performance KraneShares

H-Share Update

The Hang Seng opened lower and stayed there, closing -1.5% as volume increased from Friday. The 210 Chinese companies listed in Hong Kong and within the MSCI China All Shares Index fell -2.08% with energy and materials up +3.95% and +1.89%, respectively. Meanwhile, discretionary -3.83%, staples -3.47%, tech -2.49%, healthcare -2.42%, and communication -2.41%. Hong Kong’s most heavily traded stocks by value were Tencent, which fell -2.45%, Meituan, which fell -4.47%, Alibaba HK, which fell -4.23%, Xiaomi, which fell -2.9%, Wuxi Biologics, which fell -2.87%, Smoore Int’l, which fell -15.26%, HK Exchanges, which gained +0.79%, BYD, which fell -2.14%, Kuaishou Technology, which gained +2.75%, and Li Ning, which fell -4.1%. Southbound Stock Connect volumes were moderate/high as Mainland investors sold $214 million worth of Hong Kong stocks as Southbound Connect trading accounted for 14.7% of Hong Kong turnover.

A-Share Update

Shanghai, Shenzhen, and the STAR Board diverged to close +0.33%, -0.05%, and -2.97%, respectively, as volume declined -4.87% from Friday, which is 155% of the 1-year average. The 542 Mainland stocks within the MSCI China All Shares Index declined -0.43% with energy +5.91%, materials +3.08%, real estate +2.91%, and utilities +0.89%. Meanwhile, tech -2.78%, discretionary -1.77%, staples -1.51%, and industrials -1.18%. The Mainland’s most heavily traded stocks by value were COSCO Shipping, which gained +2.99%, TBEA, which fell -5.46%, China Northern Rare Earth, which fell -3.92%, broker East Money, which gained +2%, China Molybdenum, which gained +6.68%, Zijin Mining, which gained +3.51%, Aluminum Corp of China, which gained +10%, Tianqi Lithium, which gained +2.13%, Longi Green Energy, which fell -2.88%, and Jiangxi Special Electric Motor, which gained +9.99%. Northbound Stock Connect volumes were moderate/high as foreign investors sold -$592 million worth of Mainland stocks as Northbound Connect trading accounted for 4.5% of Mainland turnover.

Last Night’s Exchange Rates, Prices, & Yields

  • CNY/USD 6.46 versus 6.44 Friday
  • CNY/EUR 7.61 versus 7.62 Friday
  • Yield on 1-Day Government Bond 1.73% versus 1.63% Friday
  • Yield on 10-Year Government Bond 2.89% versus 2.87% Friday
  • Yield on 10-Year China Development Bank Bond 3.21% versus 3.19% Friday
  • Copper Price -0.77% overnight

Krane Funds Advisors, LLC is the investment manager for KraneShares ETFs. Our suite of China focused ETFs provide investors with solutions to capture China’s importance as an essential element of a well-designed investment portfolio. We strive to provide innovative, first to market strategies that have been developed based on our strong partnerships and our deep knowledge of investing. We help investors stay up to date on global market trends and aim to provide meaningful diversification. Krane Funds Advisors, LLC is majority owned by China International Capital Corporation (CICC).

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