(Bloomberg) — Chinese technology shares had their worst two-day drop since July due to renewed fears Beijing may roll out more restrictions for private enterprise.
Tencent Holdings Ltd. shares sank 5.2% on Monday, pummeled by speculation about an unspecified, impending crackdown on China’s largest social media and gaming firm that company spokesman Zhang Jun later denied. Traders pointed to everything from warnings from regulators over the weekend about scams in the metaverse — a virtual-reality based social media concept — to talk about yet more curbs on the gaming industry. Zhang said the online rumors were unfounded, without elaborating.
Separately, Chinese authorities told the nation’s biggest state-owned firms and banks to start a fresh round of checks on their financial exposure and other links to Jack Ma’s Ant Group Co., Bloomberg reported after markets closed. Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., which owns a third of Ant, fell 3.9% prior to the report.
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Tech Index, which tracks the biggest Chinese tech firms, lost 5.9% over two sessions, most since July. The decline started Friday when Meituan plunged as much as 18% after Beijing rolled out a new policy to curb the delivery giant’s service fees.
“There is concern about new regulatory reforms,” said Justin Tang, head of Asian research at United First Partners. “Prior to Meituan, there was a sense of ‘this is it in relation to reforms.’ Investors are now thinking that there could be more to come.”
The China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission warned on Friday against fund-raising and investment products related to the metaverse concept, citing their speculative nature. An metaverse industry body vowed on Monday that the sector should be developed to serve the real economy.
China’s New Crackdown Shows $1.5 Trillion Tech Rout Not Over Yet
Tencent shares have lost 40% since a peak in January last year. The gaming giant, along with peers such as Alibaba and Meituan, were caught in Beijing’s crosshairs as China cracked down on monopolistic behaviors and tightened its grip on user data. The yearlong clampdown has wiped out more than $1.5 trillion in market value from the nation’s tech sector.
“The market is very fearful that more crackdown will come and that could leave technology companies very little room to turn around their businesses,” said Castor Pang, head of research at Core Pacific-Yamaichi. “The metaverse fears shows that the market is worried that tech firms may not be able to grow a new business rapidly, like how they did in the past in China. That’s really dampening the already-fragile sentiment.”
Investors will find out just how much the clampdown has impacted the profitability of some of the biggest tech firms as they release earnings in coming weeks. Alibaba will report on Thursday.
“Nerves are on edge this week as Alibaba reports earnings — in the midst of war, additional Hong Kong curbs and regulatory oversight,” said Wai Ho Leong, strategist at Modular Asset Management.
(Updates with Tencent, Alibaba news in the second and third paragraph.)
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