Hong Kong should cut stamp duty, relax listing rules to reinvigorate sluggish stock market, say brokers

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Hong Kong should follow mainland China's lead in cutting the stamp duty payable when shares change hands, or scrap the levy entirely for a period of time, to boost low market turnover, according to brokers and analysts.

They also called for bourse operator Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing to relax its rules to attract more new listings.

Their calls came after Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu said on Sunday that the city's financial secretary will set up a task force to study ways to increase stock market activity and boost other areas of the capital market.

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Stock market turnover declined markedly after the government increased the stamp duty from 0.2 per cent to 0.26 per cent in August 2021. The move aimed to help finance measures designed to support small businesses and other public expenditures during the coronavirus pandemic.

The average daily turnover stood at HK$115 billion (US$14.66 billion) in the first half of this year, down 16 per cent from a year ago and 39 per cent from the first half of 2021, before the levy was raised, HKEX data shows.

"In 2021, Hong Kong increased the stamp duty by 30 per cent to support the many relief measures during the Covid pandemic," said Rex Ho, a tax partner at accounting firm PwC. "Now that Covid is over and the stock market turnover has slumped, it is time to cut the stamp duty back, or go even further."

Hong Kong now charges a stamp duty of 0.26 per cent per trade, which is equally split between buyer and seller. It is the second-highest among all stock markets worldwide, behind only the 0.5 per cent charged in Britain. Countries such as the US and Japan do not charge any stamp duty.

"A cut, or even an exemption, of the stamp duty on certain stock transactions can send a strong signal to the world that Hong Kong is keen to attract international investors to trade here to enhance the city's status as an international financial centre," Ho said.

Mainland China on Monday halved the stamp duty it charges on stock trades to 0.05 per cent. The effect was immediate, with shares in Hong Kong and mainland China to jumping by the most in five weeks.

"The [move] has generated expectations among investors that the Hong Kong market may follow," said Kenny Ng Lai-yin, a strategist at Everbright Securities International. "Reducing stamp duty ... can enhance active trading in the Hong Kong stock market."