Tencent, Alibaba have erased $1trn in value over last year

 

Bloomberg

Chinese technology giants Tencent Holdings Ltd. and Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. have lost more than $1 trillion in combined market value since the selloff in Hong Kong stocks began 13 months ago.
The two tech powerhouses account for more than half of the $2.1 trillion in total losses for Hang Seng Tech Index members since the gauge’s February 2021 record high, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Technology stocks have borne the brunt of China’s equity plunge over the past year as Beijing extends its regulatory crackdown.
The Hang Seng Tech Index has tumbled 65% since its peak on China’s moves to curb the sector’s profitability. Stocks have also been hammered by concerns of weak revenue growth amid an economic slowdown and the possibility that Chinese companies could be forced to delist from US exchanges as heightened global geopolitcal tensions further fray relations between the two nations.

China’s richest drop
$53 billion in a day
China’s stock rout cost the nation’s richest tycoons more than $53 billion.
Zhong Shanshan, known as China’s king of bottled water, led the plunge as his fortune falls by $5 billion, while Tencent Holding Ltd.’s Pony Ma dropped $3.3 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
Shares of Zhong’s Nongfu Spring Co. tumbled 9.9% in Hong Kong trading — the most since the company went public 18 months ago — though he still remains China’s wealthiest person with a fortune of $60.3 billion. Tencent falls the most since 2011 after a report that it’s facing a record fine for violating anti-money laundering rules. Pony Ma, once the country’s wealthiest person, is now third with a net worth of $35.2 billion.
The slide in Chinese stocks accelerated after US officials said Russia asked Beijing to help with the war in Ukraine, raising concerns over a backlash against Chinese companies, potentially even sanctions. The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index tracking shares traded in Hong Kong sank the most since November 2008, while the Hang Sang Tech Index tumbled 11% for the worst decline since its inception. The rout continued on Tuesday.
With the drop, the 76 Chinese billionaires among the world’s 500 richest people have lost $228 billion this year — one-fifth of their combined fortune.
Tencent falls 9.8% and dipped further on Tuesday, heading to its lowest price since 2019. The Wall Street Journal reported the People’s Bank of China found its WeChat Pay had allowed the transfer of funds for illicit purposes, along with other issues. While China’s industry crackdown has already erased billions from the value of the nation’s tech giants, Tencent had so far mostly managed to avoid the regulatory action.
Zhang Yiming of ByteDance — which is private and therefore more shielded from the market volatility — is the country’s second-richest person, with a fortune of $44.5 billion.
Jack Ma, who was China’s wealthiest before Pony Ma surpassed him, ranks No. 4 with a net worth of $34 billion. His fortune surpassed $60 billion in late 2020, before the government started an anti-monopolistic campaign, halting the listing of his Ant Group Co. payments company just two days before it was scheduled to go public.
Since then, China’s tech shares have struggled amid increased regulatory scrutiny and worries about potential delistings from the US.
Didi Global Inc. shares slumped a record 44% as the ride-hailing giant suspended preparations for a Hong Kong initial public offering. Its founder, Cheng Wei, lost his
billionaire status.

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