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Alibaba to benefit more from cross-border link, trading history of Tencent, Meituan shows

Tencent gained 23 per cent in the six months after joining Stock Connect, while Meituan and Xiaomi more than doubled over 12 months

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A man walks past the logo of Alibaba Group at its office building in Beijing. Photo: Reuters
Zhang Shidongin Shanghai
Alibaba Group Holding shares have more room to run after becoming accessible to mainland investors, according to a historical analysis of how other large Chinese tech stocks performed after joining the cross-border Stock Connect programme.
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The other three Hong Kong-listed Chinese tech companies of comparable scale that joined Stock Connect all recorded strong gains and net inflows afterward, according to data compiled by the Post.
Tencent Holdings, Meituan and Xiaomi rose between 12 and 23 per cent six months after their inclusion, the data shows. Over a 12-month horizon, the rally was even more pronounced for some stocks, with Meituan and Xiaomi more than doubling in that span.
Exposure to mainland buyers is likely to instil investor confidence in Alibaba, which has lost more than 70 per cent of its market capitalisation from a peak in 2020, putting it at risk of being surpassed in value by PDD Holdings, the operator of the budget e-commerce platform Pinduoduo.
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Alibaba turned in a stellar performance on the first day it was available via the scheme on Tuesday with a 4.2 per cent rise, making it the second-best performer on the Hang Seng Index. Turnover also spiked to almost quadruple the 30-day average, with 207 million shares changing hands, according to Bloomberg data.

Through the southbound channel of the connect programme, mainland investors with 500,000 yuan (US$70,218) worth of assets in broker accounts can trade Alibaba’s shares and other qualified Hong Kong-listed stocks.

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