Chinese Stocks in US Jump as New Stimulus Lifts Investor Mood

China stocks listed in the US are on track for a fourth straight day of gains, following a strong rally by their peers in Asia, as Beijing’s pledges of fresh stimulus help lift investor sentiment.

(Bloomberg) — China stocks listed in the US are on track for a fourth straight day of gains, following a strong rally by their peers in Asia, as Beijing’s pledges of fresh stimulus help lift investor sentiment.

Shares of US-listed tech giants including Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., JD.com Inc. and Pinduoduo Inc. all rose at least 3.5% in premarket trading Thursday. Meanwhile, NetEase rose 2.6%, while electric-vehicle makers Nio Inc. and Li Auto Inc. added 2.7% and 2.0% respectively. The Nasdaq Golden Dragon China Index is set to extend its winning streak after rallying during each of the first three trading days this week.

The strong moves in US trading follow what was the best day in nearly four months for Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Tech Index, which rose 6% on Thursday. That helped lead the city’s benchmark Hang Seng Index to a 3.6% gain, making it the best performer among Asia’s major equity gauges.

In addition to the Chinese government’s 1 trillion yuan ($146 billion) of support for the economy, traders cited short covering, an adjustment of positions ahead of Jackson Hole, and speculation that the US and China are nearing a deal on their auditing spat as reasons behind the rebound.

“Growth, tech and offshore listed China stocks are leading gains suggesting that Fed meeting may be playing a bigger role in the late day move,” said Marvin Chen, a strategist with Bloomberg Intelligence.

Stocks in Hong Kong had slumped to the lowest in months this week, as global risk-off sentiment spread ahead of the Federal Reserve’s Jackson Hole symposium. Concerns over China’s economic growth, with a deepening property crisis and power shortages spurred by a severe drought, had added to the gloom.

Following three days of losses, the Hang Seng Index was also looking ripe for a rebound to some market watchers based on various technical indicators.  

The gauge was near “oversold” levels on monthly measures of the relative strength index, approaching the 30-threshold that’s never been reached in data going back to 1972. Morgan Stanley strategist Gilbert Wong said “the risk of short squeeze in China and Hong Kong equities is rising.” 

(Updates to include details on US trading.)

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