- On Tuesday, the Asia-Pacific stock markets exhibited significant divergence and defensive characteristics. The Shanghai Composite Index (000001:CH) slightly declined by 0.07% remaining almost flat, while the Hang Seng Index (HSI:HK) fell by 0.67% due to continued devaluation in the technology sector, lacking overall upward catalysts in the market.
- Geopolitical scrutiny and corporate financing activities in the tech sector led to a dual liquidity drain. Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. Ltd. (300750:CH) completed a $5 billion share placement in Hong Kong, resulting in a high discount on stock prices. Meanwhile, regulatory intervention in the cross-border acquisition case of the Metaverse platform company (META:US) suppressed overall risk appetite.
- Ahead of the May Day holiday, institutional funds accelerated profit-taking and portfolio rebalancing. Domestic funds showed signs of moving laterally from the overvalued software and defense sectors to the real estate sector (000952:CH) with policy support expectations, reflecting a defensive logic dominated by profit expectations.
Pre-Holiday Effect and Liquidity Reallocation
As the May Day holiday approaches, trading activity in major Asia-Pacific equity markets is increasingly suppressed by calendar effects. Institutional investors generally opt to reduce risk exposure before the long holiday to avoid potential macro fluctuations in overseas markets during the market closure. According to Nanhua Futures’ observation models, the core contradiction in the current market has substantively shifted from early expectations of liquidity easing to the verification of micro-enterprise profit realization capabilities. In this context, the CSI 300 Index only recorded a mild increase of 0.06%, while indices representing small and medium growth, such as the Shenzhen Composite Index (399106:CH) and the ChiNext Composite Index (399006:CH), both registered a 0.54% decline. This scenario of stockpiling funds forces high-frequency position switches within different sectors in the market.
Capital Operations of Tech Giants and Discount Effects
In the Hong Kong stock market, large-scale capital operations of heavyweight blue-chip stocks created a significant siphon effect on short-term liquidity pools. Leading new energy battery company Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. Ltd. completed a share placement plan totaling $5 billion. Notably, the bulk transaction was priced at a 7% discount to its previous closing price. This deep discounted placement directly triggered resonant sell-offs in the secondary market, causing its listed shares to fall by 6.9% in one day and dragging down the overall performance of the Hang Seng Index. At this stage, where macro liquidity has not fully overflowed, the market often interprets such large-scale direct financing as short-term overdraft of internal funds, further causing a temporary downward shift in the valuation center.
Headwinds in AI Pricing
The long-term pricing logic of the artificial intelligence sector is facing dual revisions from fundamental and geopolitical policies. BofA Securities noted in the latest report that the application of artificial intelligence technology in the Chinese market has not yet produced substantial positive feedback on corporate balance sheets and income statements, nor has it significantly improved overall employment and productivity indicators. This cold rationale explains why the Hang Seng Tech Index (HSTECH:HK) has fallen by more than 10% within the year, significantly underperforming its North American and some Asian counterparts. The previously high valuation premium given based on the concept of Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) is facing rigorous fundamental scrutiny with the intensive disclosure of the first-quarter earnings season, and companies failing to achieve profit growth are experiencing severe valuation declines.
Policy Intervention and Valuation Restructuring Path
The marginal change in geopolitical technology competition has further amplified market hesitation. Reports indicate that regulators have asked the American tech giant, the Metaverse platform company (META:US), to withdraw its acquisition offer for the domestic startup Manus. This administrative intervention signal has been widely interpreted by the market as a comprehensive strengthening of strategic control over top domestic AI technologies and core algorithm talents by decision-makers. For technology investors in the primary and secondary markets, this means that the overseas acquisition exit path for relevant startups might be substantively cut off, thereby suppressing the liquidity premium of the entire startup ecosystem. Under this expectation, Chinese software stocks (.CSI932094) led the decline in domestic markets, while real estate stocks (000952:CH), with counter-cyclical regulatory expectations, showed relatively resilient resistance to declines.