My Blog
Business

Chinese stocks rally on reopening hope; Morgan Stanley upgrades rating


A pedestrian along a road in Beijing, China, on Monday, Oct. 24, 2022. Source: Bloomberg

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Chinese stocks saw sharp gains Monday after major cities in China reportedly further loosened Covid-related restrictions, a positive sign for an economy that has been grappling with strict virus measures for over two years.

The rally comes after Beijing and Shenzhen announced over the weekend they would lift measures that required commuters to show negative Covid test results before travel, despite the recent wave of Covid cases.

The Hang Seng TECH Index, which represents the 30 largest technology companies listed in Hong Kong, surged 8% in Asia’s trade.

The jump builds on the index’s performance so far this quarter, gaining about 20% to date. But it is still sitting in bear market territory with roughly 27% in losses year-to-date.

Tech heavyweights Bilibili rose more than 25%, Tencent gained 6% and Meituan rose more than 3%, while Alibaba jumped 8% and Xiaomi gained more about 11%. Electronic vehicle-maker Xpeng gained 24%, leading gains for the broader index, Li Auto jumped 12% and Nio climbed more than 15%.

The Hang Seng index rose 4% while China’s CSI 300 index, which tracks the largest largest mainland-listed stocks, rose almost 2%.

Investors aren't taking advantage of 'abundant liquidity' in China's real estate market: Economist

The rally in the equities market is due to a “clear” path away from China’s zero-Covid policy, Hao Hong of Grow Investment Group said on CNBC’s “Street Signs Asia.”

“The direction is very clear, because before this, many people and markets were having lots of doubts about whether China was serious about moving forward on phasing out Covid-zero,” he said.

“Now, it seems to most people that Covid-zero is being phased out, and that’s why the market is reacting very strongly,” he said.

China’s onshore and offshore yuan strengthened further as well, pushing past 7-levels against the U.S. dollar for the first time since mid-September. Oil prices also saw a jump at the open of Asia’s session, with Brent crude futures and U.S. West Texas Intermediate futures climbing over 2% on hopes of rising China demand.

The latest shift in China’s Covid regulations also increased optimism for investors betting on further reopening in the wider region, stretching to Macao’s casino sector.

Hong Kong-listed casino operators also saw significant gains, with MGM China rising 19%, Wynn Macau climbing 16% and Sands China adding 13%. Galaxy Entertainment rose 6% and SJM Holdings gained more than 7%.

Read more about China from CNBC Pro

Morgan Stanley upgrades to overweight

Related posts

Electrical carmakers in China hike costs on emerging subject matter prices

newsconquest

Golfer Rose Zhang shares winning mindset—she’s on track to beat a Tiger Woods record

newsconquest

5 things to know before the stock market opens Monday

newsconquest

Leave a Comment