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Analysis-Donald Trump makes Chinese stocks (somewhat) great again

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By Ankur Banerjee and Summer Zhen

SINGAPORE/HONG KONG (Reuters) - As U.S. President Donald Trump's wide-ranging trade war rouses fears of recession, global investors have found an unlikely new sanctuary: Chinese equities.

Hong Kong's benchmark Hang Seng Index - where many major Chinese companies are listed - is up 17% since Trump entered the White House in January.

That compares to an about 9% drop in the S&P 500, which has also shed $4 trillion in market value from record highs last month.

Trump's erratic pronouncement on tariffs and moves to slash federal government spending have challenged assumptions about the appeal of U.S. stocks, which have vastly outperformed most of their global counterparts since 2021.

Bull statues are placed in font of screens showing the Hang Seng stock index and stock prices outside Exchange Square, in Hong Kong
Bull statues are placed in font of screens showing the Hang Seng stock index and stock prices outside Exchange Square, in Hong Kong

Investors have moved from believing in "TINA" - There is No Alternative to U.S. assets - to "TIARA" - There Is A Real Alternative - said Andy Wong, a senior Hong Kong-based executive at Pictet Asset Management.

Much of the Chinese rally has been led by technology shares that have risen 29% so far in 2025, hitting their highest level in more than three years last week. Like many of the new China equities bulls, Wong said he sees opportunities in tech, defense and consumer-facing plays.

A key reason for the optimism: Chinese stocks are cheap, trading 30% under their 2021 highs. The Hang Seng Index is priced at 7 times its projected 12-month earnings - a commonly used metric to value stocks - compared to 20 times for the S&P 500, according to LSEG data.

To be sure, Chinese equities traded cheaply for a reason. Many investors were burned after a pandemic-era government crackdown on tech stocks and questions remain over the property market and the economy. Concerns about the concentration of power in the White House are magnified in Beijing, where President Xi Jinping has no serious political opposition.

But investors see plenty of upside after a major rally in tech shares following AI startup DeepSeek's splashy debut of its R1 reasoning model. The prospect of fiscal stimulus that could lift consumption - long a drag for the Chinese economy - is another tailwind.

While some of the renewed global interest in Chinese equities has come at the expense of U.S. stocks, investors are also moving out of South Korea and India's struggling markets, according to Reuters' interviews with more than a dozen fund managers and strategists.

J.P. Morgan has seen a record amount of U.S. dollars and Chinese yuan being converted into Hong Kong dollars over the past few weeks, pointing to the force of money flowing into Hong Kong stocks, said Serene Chen, the firm's head of credit, currency & emerging market sales. She did not specify the amount or the time period.