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Tencent-Against-Alibaba Bet Could Have Made 29% This Year

Pitting Tencent Against Alibaba Could’ve Made You 26% This Year

(Bloomberg) --

Betting on the gulf in performance between shares of two Chinese internet giants has been a slam-dunk trade this year -- and it may have further to run.

Investors who have adopted a pair trade strategy to short Tencent Holdings Ltd. while taking a long position in Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. could have made as much as 29% this year excluding dividends and execution costs, with the trade set for its best annual return in five years. The tactic turned more profitable in October, after Hong Kong-listed Tencent slumped to a nine-month low following a series of block trades. On Tuesday the stock fell 1.6%.

“In the long-term, the trend is probably going to continue,” said Castor Pang, head of research at Core Pacific-Yamaichi International (HK) Ltd. in Hong Kong. “A period of fast mobile-game growth in China seems to be over, and restrictions on mobile games by the government aren’t helping Tencent.”

On the other hand, Alibaba is focused on China’s online consumption, which remains strong, Pang said. Its shares rose 2.5% on Monday.

Tencent-Against-Alibaba Bet Could Have Made 29% This Year

A pair trade strategy typically involves taking two correlated securities, shorting one and going long on the other. The bigger the gap between performance, the more profitable the trade usually becomes. While Alibaba is up around 30% year-to-date in the U.S., Tencent has pared its gain to around 1%, having lost around $94 billion in market value since April.

Tencent has been trying to bounce back from last year’s regulatory clampdown that hit its games business. China is once again approving games, albeit at a slower pace. But Tencent’s losses accelerated last week amid theories that ranged from souring sentiment from mainland investors to concerns that its decision to air National Basketball Association games may backfire.

Tencent-Against-Alibaba Bet Could Have Made 29% This Year

To be sure, some investors remain bullish on Tencent, which along with Alibaba is due to report quarterly earnings next month. Among the analysts tracked by Bloomberg who cover Tencent, none have a sell rating on the stock.

But with Alibaba seen to benefit from possible measures by Beijing to boost consumption in support of a faltering economy, the trend looks set to continue, said Paul Pong, managing director at Pegasus Fund Managers Ltd.

“Tencent’s growth mainly relies on games and advertisement. But fewer companies will boost marketing expenses when the economy is bad, while the government has tightened game approvals,” he said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Jeanny Yu in Hong Kong at jyu107@bloomberg.net;Elena Popina in Hong Kong at epopina@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Sofia Horta e Costa at shortaecosta@bloomberg.net, David Watkins, Philip Glamann

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