US-Listed China Stocks See $100 Billion Wipeout in Jittery Month

US-listed Chinese stocks have lost over $100 billion in market value in April as concerns over geopolitical tensions eclipse optimism about the Asian giant’s economy.

(Bloomberg) — US-listed Chinese stocks have lost over $100 billion in market value in April as concerns over geopolitical tensions eclipse optimism about the Asian giant’s economy.

American depositary receipts of internet giants from Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. to JD.com Inc. slid Tuesday and sent the Nasdaq Golden Dragon China Index lower for a sixth straight session, notching the benchmark’s longest streak of losses in more than a year. Following a plunge of over 10% since the end of March, the gauge is heading toward its worst month since October.

Property and technology stocks will be in focus when trading in China begins on Wednesday. Shares of developers may move after the country set up a nationwide real estate registration system, clearing a major technical hurdle for rolling out a long-awaited property tax. Meanwhile, investors are watching tech stocks across Asia after strong results out of both Microsoft Corp. and Alphabet Inc.

As the initial euphoria over the Covid reopening faded, investors have quickly trimmed their bets on China’s stocks at a time when the country clashes with the US on issues from Taiwan to TikTok and semiconductor chips. President Joe Biden aims to sign an executive order in the coming weeks that will limit investment in key parts of the Asian nation’s economy by American businesses, people familiar with the internal deliberations have recently said.

US-based long-only fund managers have been the dominant sellers of Chinese ADRs this month, according to Morgan Stanley strategists led by Gilbert Wong. As a result, the gap between their holdings and the benchmarks that their funds have set against has only widened, Wong said.

Some investors have already given up their positive stance on Chinese stocks, even though a consumption rebound is leading a faster-than-expected recovery in economic activities. Union Bancaire Privee cut Chinese stocks to neutral from overweight this week, citing geopolitical risks. Meantime, the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan on Tuesday said it’s winding down its Asia equity investment team in Hong Kong.

It’s not just the stocks listed in New York that are seeing heavy losses. 

The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index, a gauge tracking Chinese stocks in Hong Kong, ranks among the five-worst performers in the past three months among 92 stock benchmarks tracked by Bloomberg. The mainland CSI 300 Index just suffered its worst five-day run since October.

(Adds mention of property and tech shares in the third paragraph.)

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