China Tech Selloff Deepens as U.S. Delisting Fears Alarm Traders

(Bloomberg) — Chinese tech shares slid, tracking overnight weakness in their U.S. peers, as renewed regulatory concerns unnerved investors still reeling from wild price swings this week.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Tech Index ended Friday 4.3% lower, paring a decline of as much as 8.9% in the morning. Traders attributed the trimming to a local media report that a Sino-U.S. negotiation on collaboration of the accounting regulations has been smooth and both sides have expressed willingness to solve the issues. The benchmark Hang Seng Index also cut losses by more than half to 1.6%.

Friday’s early morning selloff came as the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission identified five Chinese firms this week that could be subject to delisting if they failed to comply with certain auditing requirements. The Nasdaq Golden Dragon China Index sank 10% overnight, its biggest slide since October 2008, even as the Chinese securities regulator said it will cooperate with the U.S.

While analysts say the risk of delisting is unlikely to materialize in the near term, the news had unnerved investors already on edge following Beijing’s yearlong crackdown and the fallout from the war in Ukraine. Since its February 2021 peak, the China tech gauge has slumped more than 60%. 

“The selloff due to renewed concerns about ADR delisting is not logical as there is nothing new in the process that was not previously announced,” said Vey-Sern Ling, a senior analyst at Union Bancaire Privee. “Sentiment in the space is very weak, but the indiscriminate selling could prove to be good opportunity for longer-term investors.”

Equity benchmarks in Hong Kong and onshore were hit with a fresh bout of volatility this week, with prices swinging sharply intraday. Beijing’s crackdown on private enterprise appeared to intensify recently after authorities asked food delivery platforms to cut fees charged to restaurants and warned of risks in investing in products linked to the metaverse. 

The outlook for Hong Kong stocks took a turn for the worse this week after Norway’s sovereign wealth fund announced it was excluding Li Ning Co. due to the risk that the sportswear maker contributes to serious human rights violations in China’s Xinjiang, fueling worries about a potential retreat of other long-term investors. 

“I think now people are quite concerned about the foreign funds exiting from China because we have already seen one case in Li Ning,” Alex Wong, director of asset management at Ample Capital, said on Bloomberg TV on Friday. “So that is something which is quite new to the market. And of course regulatory risks remain.”

In another blow to tech investors, Didi Global Inc. has suspended preparations for its planned Hong Kong listing after failing to appease Chinese regulators’ demands that it overhaul its systems for handling sensitive user data, according to people familiar with the matter. The ride hailing company had been one of the biggest targets of the tech crackdown last year. 

Meanwhile, China’s CSI 300 Index erased losses of as much as 2.7% Friday afternoon. The National People’s Congress, which announced tax cuts and fiscal support to local governments to boost the economy, wrapped up on Friday. Still, performance for the equities benchmark was the worst during the event since 2008.

“Investors are guessing state is buying the dip and possibly hoping China will have support policy after the NPC,” says Alex Chow, chief investment officer at Infinity Asset Management Ltd.

(Updates prices in second and final paragraph)

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