Hong Kong stocks extend losses amid rate-cut caution and muted China policy outlook



Hong Kong stocks extended their losing run on Tuesday, tracking Wall Street’s overnight pullback, as traders priced in an interest-rate cut but grew uneasy about the pace of reductions expected next year. Sentiment was further dampened after economists at global banks flagged that the latest China Politburo readout suggested “a lack of urgency” for policy stimulus.

The Hang Seng Index lost 0.9 per cent to 25,549.04 at 11.10am local time, adding to the 1.2 per cent loss recorded the previous day. The Hang Seng Tech Index dropped 1.5 per cent. On the mainland, the CSI 300 Index lost 0.2 per cent and the Shanghai Composite Index slipped 0.1 per cent.

Chinese chipmaker Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation declined 1.7 per cent to HK$70.55 after US President Donald Trump approved US chip giant Nvidia’s request to export its H200 artificial intelligence chips to China. Search-engine giant Baidu slumped 3.1 per cent to HK$122.10, and local property developer Sun Hung Kai Properties lost 0.9 per cent to HK$96.25. E-commerce company Alibaba Group Holding lost 0.3 per cent to HK$152.90, and peer JD.com slipped 0.3 per cent to HK$115.90.

Limiting losses, pharmaceutical firm WuXi AppTec jumped 1.2 per cent to HK$104.60, and lender HSBC Holdings advanced 0.6 per cent to HK$109.80.

In the US, all three major benchmarks slipped, with traders growing cautious about the Federal Reserve’s rate-cut outlook amid persistent inflation and limited economic updates during the US government shutdown. The Dow Jones lost 0.5 per cent, the S&P 500 declined 0.4 per cent and Nasdaq retreated 0.1 per cent.

Chinese President Xi Jinping on Monday chaired the December Politburo meeting, a routine preparation session for the annual Central Economic Work Conference (CEWC), which sets the tone for policy in the year ahead. A readout was released by state news agency Xinhua on Monday afternoon.
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