
Hong Kong stocks erase gains to end flat with China growth fears inflicting monthly loss
- China’s higher cap for duty-free shopping by mainland visitors to Hong Kong triggered consumption optimism but growth doubts saw investors hitting the exits
The Hang Seng Index gained less than 0.1 per cent to 17,718.61 at the close. Still the benchmark lost 2 per cent in June and capped its first monthly loss in five months. The Hang Seng Tech Index slid 1 per cent and the Shanghai Composite Index rose 0.7 per cent.
Online travel agency Trip.com Group gained 0.3 per cent to HK$374.60. Among other leading gainers, China Unicom advanced 3.6 per cent to HK$7.17 and BYD Electronic climbed 3.3 per cent to HK$39.
For the month, sentiment towards stocks soured as investors flocked to the safety of government bonds, amid lack of conviction about a pickup in China’s economic recovery. The latest set of data showed a deceleration of profit growth for industrial companies, falling foreign direct investment and declines in home prices. Overseas investors have pulled US$5 billion out of Chinese onshore stocks in June, the largest monthly outflow since October, according to HSBC.
“As we have seen, most sectors haven’t had a noticeable improvement in earnings,” said Fan Jituo, an analyst at Cinda Securities. “For the next two months, the market will take a breather and trade sideways. For this to change, it calls for a pickup in earnings and inflows of fresh capital.”
Shares of three-quarters of the 82 members on the Hang Seng Index have retreated in June, with Xinyi Solar Holding, auto dealer Zhongsheng Group Holdings and Haidilao International Holdings being the worst performers with declines of at least 19 per cent.
Three companies started trading on Friday. Laopu Gold, a jewellery retailer, jumped 73 per cent from its initial public offering (IPO) price to HK$70, while Tianju Dihe Technology, a provider of application programming interface service, slid 28 per cent to HK$60.15 after rising as high as HK$117.20, and Dida, a ride-hailing platform operator, slumped 23 per cent to HK$4.65.
Meanwhile, traders awaited data on US personal consumption expenditure due Friday night, a measure of inflation preferred by the US Federal Reserve. It probably increased 2.6 per cent from a year earlier in May, slowing from a 2.7 per cent increase for the previous month, according to the consensus estimate of economists tracked by Bloomberg.
Other major Asian markets were broadly higher. Japan’s Nikkei 225 climbed 0.6 per cent in a breakout of a two-month rangebound pattern, while South Korea’s Kospi rose 0.5 per cent and Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 added 0.1 per cent.
