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Hong Kong’s $600 Billion Stock Rally Hinges on China Support

Tourists rest and take pictures at the Peak in in Hong Kong, China, on Wednesday, Aug. 28, 2019. Photographer: Paul Yeung/Bloomberg

Hong Kong’s stock rally is so dependent on mainland capital that the mere suggestion the record inflows will slow has the potential to stir panic in the city’s $7.1 trillion market.

Such was the case on Tuesday, when the People’s Bank of China withdrew incremental liquidity and an adviser warned obliquely of asset bubbles. The result was the biggest drop in eight months for the Hang Seng Index. State media was quick to calm nerves, with the Securities Times urging investors in a front-page editorial to avoid reading too much into the central bank’s money-market operations.

The benchmark stabilized on Wednesday, losing just 0.3%, even though the PBOC withdrew a greater amount of funds than the prior day. On Thursday, the benchmark fell as much as 1.7% in morning trade as the PBOC withdrew short-term liquidity at the fastest pace in three months.

As one of Asia’s largest and most open equity markets, Hong Kong is particularly sensitive to shifts in global liquidity. Driving its almost $600 billion rally this year has been plentiful cash in China, where strict capital controls and ultra-low interest rates have left residents with few investment options.

Foundation Asset Management (HK) Ltd.’s Michael Liang says the PBOC — along with many of the world’s major central banks — will continue flooding markets with cheap money.

“Liquidity is going to be with us for a long time to come,” said Liang, who as chief investment officer at Foundation Asset holds shares of Tencent Holdings Ltd. and Meituan. “We’ll continue having central bank support and fiscal policy support as long as Covid is with us.”

China Securities Journal reported on Thursday that there is no need to worry about continued liquidity tightening as the central bank is expected to offer necessary support to address any shortage before the Lunar New Year holiday. The central bank’s caution may be related to the recent rapid rise in some asset prices, it added.

History shows concerns that Beijing will end the party are warranted. A similar Hong Kong stock surge in January 2018 was derailed by President Xi Jinping’s deleveraging campaign, with the Hang Seng Index plunging as much as 26% in the following nine months. Back in 2007, plans to allow mainland investors to buy Hong Kong equities sent the gauge to a then-record before the Communist Party pulled the plug on the idea, triggering losses.

Beijing's actions killed off previous large rallies in 2007 and 2018

The liquidity withdrawals had an outsized impact on sentiment because the PBOC typically pumps funds into the financial system before the Lunar New Year, which in 2021 falls in mid-February. Demand for cash increases during the weeklong holiday as residents load up on gifts for relatives.

This year, authorities are more focused on preventing stimulus measures from inflating asset prices, especially as the economy recovers from the pandemic. The central bank will continue to support growth while curbing risks after debt surged to 280% of output, Governor Yi Gang said this week.

Dozens of mutual funds and exchange-traded products are opening in China to unprecedented demand. Many of them are now targeting Hong Kong’s far cheaper equity market. A pipeline of high-profile Chinese listings in the city, such as Kuaishou Technology, is also amping up interest among mainland investors.

Mainland-based funds bought a net $38 billion of Hong Kong shares this month through Thursday morning — or 44% of last year’s total — with inflows accelerating after the CSI 300 Index of stocks in Shanghai and Shenzhen rose to a 13-year high.

A key test will come when southbound links close for seven trading days from Feb. 9 due to the Lunar New Year holidays.

The cash looks set to keep coming after the break, which is good news for jumpy Hong Kong stock bulls. Strategists at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. predict southbound net inflows will reach $95 billion in 2021, almost double their previous forecast. Citigroup Inc. analysts have outlined a scenario in which this year’s figure could approach $400 billion. Even on Tuesday, when the Hang Seng Index fell 2.6%, mainland investors bought a net $1.8 billion.

“The rally will continue,” said Sandy Mehta, chief investment officer for Value Investment Principals. “Cyclical names including banks and industrial companies should have more upside.”

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