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Hong Kong Shares Suffer Worst Monthly Run of Losses in 36 Years

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index fell 10 percent this month, its biggest loss since the tumultuous January of 2016.

Hong Kong Shares Suffer Worst Monthly Run of Losses in 36 Years
The Hang Seng Index figure is displayed on a screen in Hong Kong, China. (Photographer: Anthony Kwan/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Hong Kong equities rallied Wednesday, but the Halloween spurt was never going to be enough to sugarcoat a grim October.

The city’s Hang Seng Index fell 10 percent this month, its biggest loss since the tumultuous January of 2016. The October decline takes the benchmark’s losing streak to six months, its longest downward run in 36 years. Even the Shanghai Composite Index, the world’s worst equity gauge this year, did better in October, falling only 7.8 percent.

Hong Kong Shares Suffer Worst Monthly Run of Losses in 36 Years

The moves in Tencent Holdings Ltd. have a big impact on the index because of the Internet company’s size, even after shedding more than $250 billion in value since late January. This month has been a bad one for Tencent, with a global tech sell-off -- the Nasdaq 100 is down 11 percent -- adding to woes including slower earnings and a clampdown by Chinese authorities on gaming.

Despite mustering a 5.9 percent rally Wednesday, Tencent is still down a whopping 17 percent this month, its worst since November 2011. Sector peers AAC Technologies Holdings Inc. and Sunny Optical Technology Co. have tumbled more than 24 percent, the worst performers on the Hang Seng Index, which eked out a 1.6 percent gain Wednesday.

Tech stocks haven’t alone dragged the index lower: all but three of its 50 constituents -- Citic Ltd., Bank of Communications Co. and China Overseas Land & Investment Ltd. -- declined this month. In addition to the tech rout, stocks continue to be buffeted by factors including the trade dispute between the U.S. and China, a sell-off in emerging markets and concern about Chinese growth.

Mainland equity markets also rose Wednesday, along with stocks across Asia. The Shanghai Composite advanced 1.4 percent, closing above the 2,600 level for the first time in four days. The yuan traded at decade low, a milestone it first reached yesterday.

To contact the reporter on this story: Will Davies in Hong Kong at wdavies13@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Richard Frost at rfrost4@bloomberg.net, Sofia Horta e Costa

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