Hong Kong stocks turn edgy on geopolitics but tech gains as China okays more online games

Hong Kong stocks surrendered initial gains posted after China approved more online games and following the overnight tech-led rally on Wall Street, as investors turned cautious amid intensifying geopolitical tensions.

The Hang Seng Index was almost unchanged at 18,069.75 at the noon break, trading in the 18,120 – 17,959 range in the morning. The Hang Seng Tech Index advanced 0.3 per cent and the Shanghai Composite Index retreated 0.3 per cent.

Electric-vehicle (EV) maker BYD dropped by as much as 1 per cent as Chinese and EU officials hold talks on EV tariffs and following Warren Buffett’s move to cut his stake in the company for the second time this month. Gold Producer Zijin Mining Group tumbled on falling bullion prices.

Offsetting some of the losses, NetEase rallied after China approved more online games in June when it gave the nod to 104 new video games from mainland developers, after fewer than 100 titles each were okayed in previous two months. Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp advanced following the US chip sector’s outperformance overnight.

“Hong Kong’s market is expected to trade in a narrow range in the short term,” said Yan Zhaojun, an analyst at Zhongtai Securities. “Latest marco data indicates a weak recovery in China’s economy, which doesn’t support a one-way upside market.”

The run-up that sent the Hang Seng Index into the bull market has stumbled, with the benchmark falling more than 8 per cent from this year’s high in May, as investors track China’s patchy economic growth and its plans for reforms. Economic data for May showed a pick up in retail sales but industrial output remained sluggish and home prices continued its downward spiral.

The overhang of geopolitical tensions linger. On the heels of moves by the US and the European Union, Canada said that it would start a public consultation on imposing tariff on Chinese electric vehicle imports, a move that is expected to hit BYD hardest. China and the European Union are entangled in an escalating trade dispute, with Beijing launching an anti-dumping probe into the imports of pork from the block as retaliation.

Property developer stocks are being tracked amid a rising number of winding-up petitions by creditors. A Hong Kong court granted a four-week grace period to Shimao Group to secure creditors’ approval for its debt restructuring plan. Shimao’s shares were unchanged at HK$0.76.

BYD traded unchanged at HK$239.60 before an intraday loss of 1 per cent. Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway sold 2.01 million Hong Kong-traded shares of the company on June 19, cutting its stake to 5.99 per cent from 6.18 per cent, according to the exchange filing. That followed a reduction on June 11.

Zijin Mining lost 2.7 per cent to HK$16.18. NetEase rallied 4.4 per cent to HK$148.10 while SMIC added 1.2 per cent to HK$17.40.

Two companies made their trading debut on the mainland. Yonz Technology, which makes photovoltaic products, jumped 59 per cent from its initial public offering price to 37.07 yuan in Shanghai and Aidite Technology, a producer of dental materials, surged 92 per cent to 86.20 yuan in Shenzhen.

Other major Asian markets were broadly higher. Japan’s Nikkei 225 climbed 1.4 per cent and South Korea’s Kospi rose 0.2 per cent, while Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 lost 0.8 per cent.

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