Hong Kong Stocks Dip, Mainland Holds Steady as Trump Appoints China Hawks to Cabinet

Hong Kong stocks lower, mainland steady as Trump names China hawks to cabinet
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CHINA-STOCKS/MIDDAY (CORRECTED):REFILE-Hong Kong stocks lower, mainland steady as Trump names China hawks to cabinet

HONG KONG, – Hong Kong slipped while China stocks were flat at midday on Wednesday in volatile trade, as investors continued to digest U.S. President-elect Donald Trump’s plans to appoint China hawks to key cabinet positions.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng benchmark fell 0.6% by the noon break to a seven-week low. China’s blue-chip CSI 300 edged up 0.1% after losing as much as 0.6%, and the Shanghai Composite was little changed.

The Golden Dragon China Index tumbled 4.5% overnight in New York.

Sources said Marco Rubio, who has harshly criticized China, will become secretary of state, while Mike Waltz will take on the role of national security adviser.

“Investors are now focusing on Trump’s cabinet picks to gauge whether his China policy will be more hawkish than during his first term,” said Jason Chan, senior investment strategist at Bank of East Asia

“Short-term sentiment on China is likely to remain weak amid uncertainties around him.”

The Hang Seng benchmark has declined nearly 15% since the October peak to a seven-week low, poised to erase all gains made since Beijing unveiled a major stimulus package in late September. While the government has announced further support measures since then, investors have found them to be disappointing.

Mainland property developers led the fall in Hong Kong on Wednesday, with a sub-index tracking the sector down 2.3%.

CSI Energy added 1%, lifting onshore markets higher.

The mood onshore improved as Nomura raised its China growth forecast, citing signs that economic activity may be picking up.

Nomura analysts revised their growth forecast for the fourth quarter to 4.9% year-on-year, up from 4.4%. They also updated the annual GDP growth forecast to 4.8%, up from 4.7%. However, they kept their 2025 forecast at 4.0%.

The yuan

bounced

off a more than three-month low against the dollar on Wednesday, lifted by firmer-than-expected official midpoint guidance.

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