Week in Review
- Hong Kong returned from its holiday in good spirits as the Hang Seng Index gained +5.9% on Wednesday on multiple catalysts, including Hong Kong reopening for unrestricted travel, the US dollar potentially peaking, and the 20th National Party Congress, which will start on the 16th.
- Travel and real estate stocks have led gains this week in Hong Kong as investors appear to expect a recovery in both spaces.
- Mainland China’s stock and bond markets have been closed this week for the Golden Week national holiday and will reopen on Monday.
Key News
Asian equities were off overnight on light volumes as Fed tightening fears reignited though the region posted gains for the week. The consensus is that the Fed will raise interest rates until something breaks, i.e. a financial/economic crisis occurs. Sounds like a great game plan…
Today was the last day of Mainland China’s Golden Week holiday, while Pakistan was closed for Mawlid-al-Nabi, the spiritual day on which Muslims celebrate the birth of the Prophet Muhammed. The US dollar was a little weaker this morning though the Asia currency index and China’s offshore renminbi were off versus the US dollar.
It was a very light-volume day in Hong Kong, with China still on holiday, meaning no support from Mainland investors. Hong Kong volume was only 45% of the 1-year average, though the Main Board short selling increased overnight to 59% of the 1-year average as 22% of Main Board volume was short. JD.com HK had 45% of volume short, Alibaba had 20% short, Meituan had 35% short, and Tencent had 9% short. Surprisingly, the Hong Kong Stock Exchange and/or Hong Kong regulators have not put short-selling limits in place, which Taiwan did earlier this week. The level of short-selling is embarrassing! Internet stocks were off though Li Auto HK fell -14.75%, dragging Nio -10.47%, and Xpeng -6.04%. Chatter ranges from weak Golden Week auto sales to a major shareholder selling to leveraged investors blowing up.
After the US close yesterday, MSCI
The Hang Seng and Hang Seng Tech indexes fell -1.51% and -3.3%, respectively, on volume that fell -8.79% from yesterday, which is only 45% of the 1-year average. 57 stocks advanced, while 446 stocks fell. Main Board short turnover increased +6.78% from yesterday, which is 59% of the 1-year average, as 22% of the volume was short. Value factors “outperformed” (fell less) growth factors as large caps “outperformed” small caps. All sectors were negative as energy fell -0.65%, staples fell -0.82%, and financials fell -1.1%, while real estate fell -3.3%, materials fell -2.98%, and tech fell -2.69%. The top-performing subsectors were semiconductors and Macau casino stocks, while autos, software, and healthcare equipment were among the worst. Southbound Stock Connect was closed today.
Shnaghai, Shenzhen, and the STAR Board reopen on Monday.
Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/brendanahern/2022/10/07/msci-solicits-china-a-share-feedback-hong-kong-shorts-press-again-week-in-review/