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Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index is getting a massive overhaul. Here are the stock winners and losers

The planned reforms are good for tech stocks.

Pedestrians walk past a stock market display board showing

Chinese technology firms such as Xiaomi Corp. and Meituan were higher Tuesday, seen as beneficiaries of one of the biggest-ever revamps for Hong Kong’s benchmark Hang Seng Index.

The wide-ranging overhauls to the gauge include increasing the number of constituents to 80 and limiting a stock’s weighting to 8%, Hang Seng Indexes Co. said in a statement on Monday. Meituan rose as much as 5.8% while Xiaomi added 4.7% — such firms that are secondary-listed or carry unequal voting rights will no longer be limited to 5% weightings. The broader index was down 0.7% by the midday break amid concerns over a Chinese official’s warning about asset bubbles.

The revamp also shortens the listing history requirement for a company to be included. New stocks will need just three months of trading before they’re up for inclusion, regardless of size. Implementation of the changes will begin as early as the May index review and go through mid-2022.

Winners

  • Other gainers Tuesday include Kuaishou Technology, up as much as 8.4%; NetEase Inc. +3.2%; JD.Com Inc. +3.7%, Xinyi Glass Holdings Ltd. +6.1% and Country Garden Services Holdings Co. +6.9% — all among potential future inclusions to the benchmark, according to Smartkarma
  • Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. is also among firms that are secondary-listed or carry unequal voting rights, although stock fell 1.5%
    • “Alibaba is one of the beneficiaries from the HSI reform, but many investors are still worried about the political risk facing it given uncertainty over Ant Group’s restructuring and IPO schedule,” said Steven Leung, UOB Kay Hian (Hong Kong) executive director. “Investors may chose peers such as JD.Com, which has less political risk and faster earnings growth.”

    Losers

    • Under the new weighting cap, stocks that currently have a larger presence on the index could face redemptions by the passive funds, according to CGS-CIMB Securities International Pte. and Everbright Sun Hung Kai Co.
    • AIA Group Ltd., which currently holds a 9.75% weighting, falls as much as 2.9%
    • Hong Kong’s local firms face a battle to preserve their weight in the index, with their number to be evaluated at least every two years. Goldman Sachs says the aggregate weighting of local firms could fall from 40% to 32%, as mainland firms’ weighting increases.
    • According to Smartkarma potential deletions include Bank Of Communications Co., which falls as much as 1.4%, and China Life Insurance Co. which drops 1.1%
    • “The biggest losers probably would be in finance or banking sectors, as they are the heaviest constituent stocks in Hang Seng index now,” said Edison Pun, senior market analyst at Saxo Markets Hong Kong. “With the adjustment, their importance would be greatly reduced.”