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Hang Seng Index Falls for Third Straight Day, Breaks Below 19,000; Tencent and Alibaba Buck Trend with Southbound Fund Inflows

The Hang Seng Index dropped for three consecutive sessions, losing the 19,000-point mark. Despite the downturn, Southbound funds increased holdings in Tencent and Alibaba, signaling long-term confidence in tech giants. This article analyzes the sell-off drivers, capital flows, and key stock performance, offering a market outlook.

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Hang Seng Index Falls for Third Straight Day, Breaks Below 19,000; Tencent and Alibaba Buck Trend with Southbound Fund Inflows
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Hang Seng Index Falls for Third Straight Day, Breaks Below 19,000; Tencent and Alibaba Buck Trend with Southbound Fund Inflows

Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index has declined for three consecutive trading sessions, falling below the key 19,000-point level and heightening market caution. Analysts attribute the correction to a combination of external macro pressures, weaker-than-expected mainland economic data, and profit-taking in some heavyweight stocks. However, amid the broad weakness, Southbound funds have been increasing their positions in tech leaders like Tencent and Alibaba, reflecting sustained confidence in core assets.

1. Three Key Drivers Behind the Hang Seng's Decline

First, renewed expectations of global liquidity tightening. The Federal Reserve's recent hawkish signals strengthened the U.S. dollar index, putting pressure on emerging market capital flows. According to the Fed's statement, market expectations for the number of rate cuts this year have been lowered, directly weighing on valuations of risk assets like Hong Kong stocks. Second, the latest mainland manufacturing PMI data showed a month-on-month decline, indicating that the economic recovery remains fragile, raising doubts about the earnings outlook for cyclical sectors. Third, the Hang Seng had rebounded significantly from its lows, with some tech and property stocks posting substantial gains, prompting profit-taking that accelerated the index's pullback.

2. Southbound Fund Flows: Counter-Cyclical Positioning in Tech Leaders

Despite the Hang Seng's persistent weakness, Southbound funds have not staged a large-scale retreat. According to public data from the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, Southbound funds recorded a net inflow of tens of billions of Hong Kong dollars over the past three trading days, with Tencent and Alibaba being the primary targets. For Tencent, its overseas gaming business is progressing smoothly, and advertising revenue from its video accounts continues to grow, with institutions generally viewing its fundamentals as resilient. Alibaba, after completing its organizational restructuring, is focusing on its core e-commerce and cloud computing businesses, and market expectations for cost reduction and efficiency improvements have risen.

Notably, this round of Southbound buying is not a blind bottom-fishing but shows clear structural characteristics. Besides Tencent and Alibaba, Meituan and Xiaomi also saw net buying, while financial and property sectors experienced net selling. This reflects a strengthening preference among mainland funds for Hong Kong-listed tech leaders, as they believe valuations have entered a reasonable range.

3. Divergent Performance Among Heavyweights; Tencent and Alibaba Buck the Trend

As the Hang Seng lost the 19,000-point level, heavyweight stocks showed divergent performance. Tencent and Alibaba were relatively resilient, even posting slight gains, acting as key stabilizers for market sentiment. Tencent recently announced an increase in its share buyback program, signaling confidence to the market. Alibaba benefited from expectations of a spin-off listing of its business units, with valuation revaluation logic gaining recognition from investors. In contrast, financial heavyweights like HSBC and AIA fell more sharply due to interest rate expectations, dragging down the index.

From a technical perspective, the Hang Seng has strong support near the 19,000-point level, but whether it can stabilize in the short term depends on changes in the external environment. If Southbound fund inflows continue and leaders like Tencent and Alibaba remain strong, the index could form a temporary bottom around 19,000 points.

4. Outlook: Focus on Policy Signals and Fund Flow Sustainability

Looking ahead, the Hang Seng's direction will depend on three key variables: first, the pace of implementation of mainland pro-growth policies, especially the synergy between fiscal and industrial measures; second, clarity on the Fed's rate path—if expectations for rate cuts re-emerge, it would boost Hong Kong stock liquidity; and third, whether Southbound funds can maintain the current net inflow scale, particularly the sustained buying of Tencent and Alibaba.

Overall, the Hang Seng's short-term correction does not alter its medium- to long-term allocation value. For investors, the current phase calls for a greater focus on individual stock fundamentals rather than index volatility. Tech leaders like Tencent and Alibaba, with strong moats and cash flow advantages, remain core targets for both Southbound funds and foreign investors.

Disclaimer

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Financial markets involve risk; invest with caution. Data and views are as of the time of publication and may change with market conditions.

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Disclaimer

Original YayaNews editorial coverage, published for informational purposes.

This article is authored by YayaNews. It is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

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