Account Info
Log Out
English
Back
Log in to access Online Inquiry
Back to the Top
February CPI is a little high: Will rates come down in March?
Views 536K Contents 82

WuXi AppTech, Li Auto lead Hong Kong stock losses on earnings concerns as bets on Fed rate cut before May fade

Hong Kong stocks slipped, extending a retreat from a three-month high, as weak corporate earnings and guidance weighed on sentiment and Chinese authorities stayed away from major stimulus measures to rejuvenate the economy. The Hang Seng Index declined 1.1 per cent to 16,550.90 at the local noon trading break. The Tech Index fell 1.8 per cent, while the Shanghai Composite Index lost 0.4 per cent. WuXi AppTech tumbled 6.7 per cent to HK$39.90, the lowest level in over a month, after the company gave downbeat 2024 guidance on earnings due to external uncertainties after being singled out by US lawmakers for possible sanctions. Its affiliated company WuXi Biologics slumped 4.9 per cent to HK$14.04, the lowest since December 2017. E-commerce group Alibaba Group slipped 1.3 per cent to HK$71.05 and food delivery platform operator Meituan retreated 1.6 per cent to HK$88.95. China Unicom fell 0.4 per cent to HK$5.54 and EV maker Xpeng tumbled 3.8 per cent to HK$38.95 before their earnings reports later today. Li Auto slumped 9.3 per cent to HK$126.10 after local media reported that the sales of its new model missed internal targets.
“Hong Kong stocks are likely to face more pressure during the earnings season” May Zhao, an analyst at Zhongtai Securities in Hong Kong, wrote in a note on Monday. “They still need a meaningful recovery in fundamentals to support a run-up.” So far, 126 companies accounting for 26 per cent of MSCI China’s market capitalisation have released their fourth quarter earnings, according to Goldman Sachs, producing a 14 per cent gain in net income on average. They trailed the 20 per cent average gain by companies in Asia outside Japan, the US bank said.
The Hang Seng Index reached a three-month high on March 12, after surging 14.3 per cent from this year’s low seen in mid-January. Since then, the rally has lost momentum after fresh data reignited concerns about China’s weak recovery and poor earnings outlook and Beijing’s aversion to aggressive stimulus measures.
Sentiment remains cautious ahead of the Federal Reserve’s meeting this week, with traders cutting bets on a rate cut in March and May after a strong February inflation data. Key Asian stock markets were mixed on Tuesday. Japan’s Nikkei 225 erased losses to post a 0.1 per cent gain, after the Bank of Japan scrapped its negative interest rate policy. South Korea’s Kospi Index tumbled 1.4 per cent while Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 gained 0.4 per cent.
Disclaimer: Community is offered by Moomoo Technologies Inc. and is for educational purposes only. Read more
1
+0
Translate
Report
41K Views
Comment
Sign in to post a comment