Cheap, but no catalyst

2 min read

A huge slump in a long-term star market should draw bargain hunters – but Hong Kong has changed

Cris Sholto Heaton Investment columnist

Hong Kong has delivered spectacular returns for investors over the long term. In the 50 years or so since the rapid industrialisation began feeding through to rising wealth, the stockmarket has far outstripped both Singapore – which has been a huge success in its own right (see page 14) – and global markets as a whole. Its unique status as a trade and investment gateway to China, while operating under very different economic and social conditions to the mainland, gave it a second wind from the 2000s even after its own high-growth phase began to tail off.

The market has been hugely volatile, but up until 2019, history showed that it was worth staying the course. Yet ever since widespread anti-government protests that year and the subsequent imposition of laws that curbed civil liberties and eroded Hong Kong’s autonomy, that has looked far less certain. Over the last three years, the index is down by more than 30% (including dividends).

Pessimistic outlook

To say there is a great deal of pessimism around Hong Kong is an understatement. The market has recovered from slumps before – look at the Asian crisis in 1997 in the chart – but this feels like something new. Optimists such as Mark Mobius are firmly in the minority; the consensus is more that “Hong Kong is over”, as economist Stephen Roach – once a long-term bull on China – put it earlier this year.

The recent resignation of two British judges who served on Hong Kong’s Court of Final Appeal reflects fears that trust in the legal system has been badly damaged by the prosecution of opposition politicians and activists under new national security laws. “Hong Kong, once a vibrant and politically diverse community is slowly becoming a totalitarian state,” wrote one of them, Jonathan Sumption, in the