Chinese Stocks in US Extend Rally Nearly Erasing Record Selloff

Chinese stocks in the US are extending their rally after a record selloff on Monday, as Beijing’s pledge to support its financial markets lifted investor confidence and retail traders bought the dip.

(Bloomberg) — Chinese stocks in the US are extending their rally after a record selloff on Monday, as Beijing’s pledge to support its financial markets lifted investor confidence and retail traders bought the dip. 

The Nasdaq Golden Dragon China Index, rose as much as 9.3% on Wednesday, bringing its two-day gain to more than 14%, the most since March. The index has already erased over two-thirds of its losses from Monday’s session. Among the top performers, Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., JD.com Inc. and Pinduoduo Inc. jumped more than 9%, while Nio Inc. advanced 2.5%. 

Some investors saw a glimmer of hope after China’s central bank and foreign-exchange regulator vowed to ensure the healthy development of financial markets and reiterated that the yuan would be “basically stable.” The comments followed President Xi Jinping’s tightening of control over the government, which spurred fears among foreign investors that his strategy will stifle the nation’s economy and private enterprise. 

“While sentiment is likely to stay depressed and markets could remain volatile until concrete policy actions emerge, pro-growth announcements could lead to sharp rallies, as happened in May or June,” UBS Global Wealth Management Chief Investment Officer Mark Haefele wrote in a note Wednesday. 

The risks and upsides for China equities are balanced, and investors should consider sticking to benchmark allocations for Chinese stocks rather than going underweight, according to Haefele. “Those with a lower allocation could consider buying on dips, and we continue to recommend positioning in sectors with resilient earnings given the prevailing headwinds,” he wrote.

That’s exactly what some traders did during Monday’s epic selloff. The American depositary receipts of Chinese companies were among the most heavily purchased stocks this week as retail investors sought to “buy the dip,” Vanda Research analysts including Marco Iachini wrote in a note on Wednesday.

Retail investors’ purchase of the top Chinese ADRs Monday surpassed levels last seen during the Shanghai lockdowns in March, with more than $157 million of net flows, according to Vanda. Alibaba, Nio and Pinduoduo were the biggest beneficiaries with $92 million, $32 million and $12 million of net inflows, respectively, the report said, noting that Alibaba attracted close to 60% of the inflows on that day.

Still, China’s equity markets remain fragile and are at risk of being bogged down by the nation’s Covid-zero policy. Reports of a lockdown in one of Wuhan city’s central districts dealt a blow to indexes in China and Hong Kong early Wednesday.

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