SVB decline may add to concerns of China stock investors

HONG KONG, March 12 (Reuters) – Chinese stock investors, already disappointed by Beijing’s lower-than-expected economic growth target this year, will be further dismayed by the shock collapse of U.S. lender SVB Financial Group, market participants said.

China’s CSI300 index ( .CSI300 ) fell 4% last week, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng ( .HSI ) fell 6%, after China rubber-stamped its modest GDP growth target of 5% for 2023 – set during the annual session of parliament. – dashed hopes for a bigger push.

Market sentiment could be further dampened by start-up-focused lender SVB ( SIVB.O )’s sudden plunge on Friday, sparking heated debate over its fall over the weekend in China.

“The SVB failure is a barometer of macro risks…reflecting how asset prices are affected by central bank rate hikes,” said Yuan Yuwei, hedge fund manager at Water Wisdom Asset Management. assets.

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While the event is unlikely to trigger another financial crisis, it could have a negative psychological impact on Chinese markets, he said.

SVB’s Chinese joint venture with Shanghai Pudong Development Bank ( 600000.SS ) said on Saturday it had a better corporate structure and independently operated balance sheet in an apparent attempt to appease local customers.

But many Chinese tech start-ups, especially those with dollar funding, have opened US accounts at SVB. At least one WeChat group, which has several hundred members, is made up of SVB’s eager Chinese customers seeking to protect their interests.

Low risk appetite from Monday’s widening China-Hong Kong stock connect could dampen any enthusiasm. More than 1,000 A-shares listed in China and nearly 200 stocks traded in Hong Kong will be included in the cross-border investment scheme.

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Don’t evaporate

Li Bei, a fund manager at Shanghai-based hedge fund house Banksia, said he had reduced holdings and “maintained relatively low exposure”, citing a lack of good prospects.

A prudent economic stimulus and relatively tight credit environment for 2023 means “it will be difficult for stocks to move higher from current levels and the market will remain volatile,” Banksia wrote in a letter to investors last week.

China retained its central bank governor and finance minister on Sunday at the end of a week-long session of the National People’s Congress (NPC) that ushered in Xi Jinping’s third five-year term as Chinese president. Li Qiang, a longtime Xi confidante, was promoted to premier to lead an economy that grew just 3% last year.

Derek Lin, a portfolio manager at Boston-based Columbia Threadneedle Investments, said the government “needs a good year” but is in no rush to start big stimulus, so “the market is trying to get excited, but there’s some reluctance.”

Stanley Tao, founder and CIO of Golden Nest Capital Management, does not expect a broad-based bull market in China this year as the soft asset market remains a drag on the economy. He is wary of tech stocks that could be hurt by US-China friction.

Domestic A-shares, however, are more vulnerable to potential spillovers from an SVB collapse than offshore China stocks, analysts say.

Zhao Bing Zhu, global market strategist at JP Morgan Asset Management, said the SVP failure reflected tighter financing conditions for technology companies during the US rate hike cycle.

“The concern is that we can only see the tip of the iceberg,” Zhu said during Saturday’s live broadcast.

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(This story has been reprinted to fix the date)

Additional reporting by Samuel Shen and Georgina Lee; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan

Our Standards: Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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