Stock market cheers China’s anti-monopoly measures

Posted By : Rina Latuperissa
6 Min Read

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Upstart tech companies outperformed established mega-cap stocks in China’s stock market during the first five weeks of 2021, after Chinese regulators proposed a set of measures to prevent the tech giants from stifling up-and-coming competitors. It’s much too early to gauge the economic impact of the new Chinese regulations, which include measures to prevent Big Tech from hoarding data, manipulating e-commerce platforms to suppress competition, and predatory takeovers. But the equity market evidently believes that the new regulations improve the outlook for new market entrants.

Chinese tech stocks rose sharply at the beginning of 2021. The KraneShares CSI China Internet ETF (symbol: KWEB), a popular vehicle for investing in the sector, returned 24% between Dec. 21 and Feb. 8, while the S&P 500 gained just 4%. The lion’s share of the gain came from challengers rather than established firms. An exception is Meituan, the meals-delivery firm that was a challenger only a year ago.

The top performer was Agora, which competes with Tencent’s 900 million streaming video customers. Yeahka competes with Tencent’s 1 billion WeChat Pay users as well as Alibaba, which together control 90% of China’s mobile payments. 

Overall, we observe a slight negative correlation between market capitalization and year-to-date returns for the constituents of the KWEB portfolio.

Gains among up-and-coming Chinese companies did not come at the expense of the megacaps, to be sure. Alibaba gained more than 12% during 2021 to date while Tencent rose by more than 30%. But the challengers gained even more. 

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