Chinese tech stocks plunged for a third day as investor fears grow over a broadening crackdown by Beijing, with shares of Tencent falling the most in a decade after the internet group halted registrations for its flagship app.
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng stock benchmark tumbled more than 5 per cent on Tuesday with the Hang Seng Tech sub-index falling 8.7 per cent. Tencent’s shares fell 10 per cent while ecommerce group Alibaba dropped 7.7 per cent and delivery platform Meituan skidded 17 per cent.
The Nasdaq Golden Dragon index, a benchmark of Chinese tech stocks listed in New York, has dropped 15 per cent in two days — its worst fall since 2008.
Chinese tech shares have been pummelled in recent sessions as concerns mount over the broadening scope and severity of Beijing’s regulatory assault on the sector. On Friday, China announced a sweeping overhaul of its $100bn private education industry that threatens to wipe out billions of dollars of foreign investment.
Tencent, one of China’s biggest tech groups, said on Tuesday that its flagship WeChat social network had suspended registrations of new users as it upgraded its security technology to “to align with all relevant laws and regulations”. The company said new registrations “will be restored after the upgrade is complete, which is expected in early August”.
Regulatory pressure from Beijing has been escalating rapidly since the $4.4bn initial public offering of Didi Chuxing in New York last month, days after which China’s cyber-security watchdog announced a data-security probe into the ride-hailing group.
Senior leaders in Beijing have called for an overhaul of the regime through which Chinese companies can list offshore. The country’s cyber-security regulator has announced plans to review all overseas listings of companies with more than 1m users on national security grounds.
Traders in Hong Kong were stunned by the latest sell-off on Tuesday and said they were struggling to cope with trading volumes.
“Have I ever seen anything like this? No,” said Louis Tse, founder of Hong Kong brokerage Wealthy Securities and a market veteran. Tse added that the repercussions of the latest regulatory move against Tencent were “profound”.
In mainland China, the CSI 300 index of Shanghai- and Shenzhen-listed stocks fell 3.5 per cent.