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Hong Kong, Asian Stocks Drop as US Pressures China: Markets Wrap
Hong Kong, Asian Stocks Drop as US Pressures China: Markets Wrap · Bloomberg

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(Bloomberg) -- Asian stocks fell after President Donald Trump’s move to curb Chinese investments and proceed with tariffs on Canada and Mexico prompted investors to trim risky bets. A decline in US stocks at the end of trading also hurt sentiment.

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Equity indexes in Hong Kong and mainland China dropped at the open and a regional gauge of shares fell for a second consecutive day. The yield on 10-year Treasuries slid two basis point to 4.4% in early Asian trading while gold touched a record Monday on demand for safe havens.

Sentiment in the broader market soured after Trump rolled out a memorandum telling a key government committee to curb Chinese spending on tech, energy and other strategic American sectors. That’s threatening to undo a rally in Chinese technology shares after optimism over DeepSeek and President Xi Jinping’s meeting with corporate leaders including Alibaba’s Jack Ma, had sent a key gauge to a three-year high.

Trump laid out the plan in a national security presidential memorandum signed Friday that commits to using “all necessary legal instruments” to bar Chinese affiliates from investing in US technology, critical infrastructure, health care, agriculture, energy, raw materials and other industries.

The directive sets the stage for a more muscular use of CFIUS, a secretive panel that scrutinizes proposals by foreign entities to buy US companies or property, to thwart Chinese investment.

“Trump’s directive to limit Chinese spending and investment in strategic US sectors has been the trigger for a solid reduction in extended longs and this will spill over in the HK equity cash open,” Chris Weston, head of research at Pepperstone Group Ltd., wrote in a note. “The key aspect will then be how China/Asia-based traders act after the initial weakness.”

A gauge of Chinese shares in Hong Kong tumbled 2.8% while Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. slumped as much as 7.9% in Hong Kong trading. The company’s American depositary receipts fell 10%, the biggest decline since October 2022.

In Japan, trading houses, including Mitsubishi Corp. and Marubeni Corp., rallied on Tuesday after Berkshire Hathaway Inc. said it was looking to increase ownership in the companies in an annual letter to shareholders dated Saturday.