Hong Kong stocks staged their biggest rally in months as Chinese public funds piled into beaten-down tech and consumer names, potentially ending a six-month correction.
Hong Kong stocks staged their biggest rally in months as Chinese public funds piled into beaten-down tech and consumer names, potentially ending a six-month correction.

Hong Kong stocks staged their biggest rally in months as Chinese public funds piled into beaten-down tech and consumer names, potentially ending a six-month correction.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index surged 2.99% to 24,199 on July 8 as Chinese public funds rotated into undervalued tech and consumer stocks after a six-month downtrend.
"Fund managers have been building positions in quality Hong Kong-listed names through southbound Stock Connect over recent weeks, betting the valuation reset had gone too far," a Beijing-based fund manager told Securities Times.
The Hang Seng Tech Index jumped 4.97%, led by SaaS, mobile internet and software companies that had been sold off on AI disruption narratives. Consumer stocks also rallied, with fund managers saying cash-flow stability in Hong Kong-listed consumer names offers comparable upside to tech after the prolonged correction. The rally came as the Shanghai Composite fell 0.49% to 3,970, while the S&P 500 slipped 0.28% to 7,482.
The rebound marks a potential turning point for Hong Kong equities after six months of sustained outflows that dragged the HSI to multi-year lows. With Chinese public funds increasing allocation through southbound channels, the valuation repair cycle could extend further, particularly if U.S.-China rate differentials narrow and corporate earnings stabilize in the second half.
Tech and Consumer Lead the Rotation
SaaS and software companies that had been under pressure from AI substitution narratives were among the top gainers, with multiple names held by public funds posting double-digit advances. The tech-heavy rally reflects a broader reassessment of Hong Kong's digital economy names, which had fallen more than 30% from their peaks during the correction.
Unlike the A-share market where tech growth dominates fund flows, Hong Kong-focused funds have been prioritizing stable cash-flow generators in the consumer sector. Several fund managers told Securities Times they began adding consumer positions through southbound channels in recent weeks, betting consumer stocks would show comparable recovery momentum to tech once the macro outlook improves.
The divergence between Hong Kong and mainland markets was notable — the Shanghai Composite fell 0.49% and the CSI 300 also declined, suggesting the Hong Kong rally was driven by fund rotation rather than broad China macro optimism. Southbound flows through Stock Connect have been a key channel for this repositioning, with mainland fund managers redirecting capital from A-shares to Hong Kong-listed names they consider deeply undervalued after the six-month selloff.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.