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Hang Seng Index Battles 26,000 Support Level Amid Mixed Global Signals
The Hong Kong stock market is facing a critical juncture as the Hang Seng Index hovers just above the psychologically important 26,000-point support level. After a brief reprieve from its two-day downturn that saw losses of nearly 700 points or 2.7 percent, the benchmark has been oscillating between gains and losses over the past six sessions. The index currently sits just above 26,380 points, with market watchers warning of potential downside pressure if selling intensifies in the coming sessions.
Pressure Mounting on Hong Kong’s Main Benchmark
The Hang Seng Index experienced a sharp decline on Thursday, dropping 384.70 points or 1.44 percent to close at 26,391.02. Trading activity was confined within a 651-point range, oscillating between 26,373.01 and 27,024.07 throughout the session. The technical picture suggests vulnerability around the 26,000-point level, a key support threshold that could become critical if buying interest wanes. Market participants are closely monitoring whether this support holds or if further weakness could trigger additional sell-offs.
Tech and Financials Lead Market Retreat
Weakness in technology and financial stocks accelerated the decline. Major Chinese tech names suffered notable losses: Alibaba Group contracted 3.57 percent while its health-focused subsidiary, Alibaba Health Info, fell 3.97 percent. E-commerce player JD.com dropped 2.62 percent, and smartphone maker Xiaomi Corporation declined 1.18 percent. The financial sector also weighed heavily, with China Life Insurance retreating 4.10 percent and Industrial and Commercial Bank of China skidding 0.62 percent. Property-related names extended losses, including New World Development’s steep 5.92 percent plunge and Hang Lung Properties’ 1.10 percent decline.
Consumer-related stocks faced mixed fortunes. Dairy giant China Mengniu Dairy stumbled 4.15 percent, while ANTA Sports sank 2.54 percent. However, pockets of strength emerged: CK Infrastructure surged 4.52 percent, Techtronic Industries jumped 1.94 percent, and beverage maker Li Ning added 0.63 percent. Notable weakness came from WuXi Biologics, which cratered 7.45 percent, and Galaxy Entertainment, which tanked 4.25 percent.
Wall Street Weakness and Global Headwinds Weigh on Sentiment
The negative lead from Wall Street compounded sentiment challenges for Asian markets. Though the Dow perked up modestly by 17.05 points or 0.03 percent to 49,499.20, the broader market showed weakness. The NASDAQ tumbled 273.70 points or 1.18 percent to close at 22,878.38, while the S&P 500 lost 37.27 points or 0.54 percent to finish at 6,908.86. The retreat came amid a negative reaction to Nvidia’s earnings announcement. Despite the chipmaker reporting better-than-expected fiscal fourth-quarter results and providing upbeat guidance, the market’s reaction suggested growing caution about near-term valuations in the technology space. Networking stocks also showed notable downside movement, contributing significantly to the tech sector’s underperformance.
Economic Data and Energy Markets in Focus
U.S. labor market data revealed modest increases in first-time unemployment claims last week, potentially signaling shifts in employment momentum. Crude oil prices illustrated the volatile backdrop for commodity-linked stocks. West Texas Intermediate crude for April delivery was down $0.11 or 0.2 percent at $65.31 per barrel, unable to hold earlier strength despite Middle East tensions. Progress in U.S.-Iran negotiations weighed on energy prices as geopolitical concerns eased temporarily.
Hong Kong is expected to release January trade figures later, which could provide additional direction for sentiment. December data showed robust activity with imports rising 30.6 percent month-on-month and exports climbing 26.1 percent, though this translated to a trade deficit of HKD63.3 billion. These metrics underscore the economic backdrop against which the Hang Seng Index continues to navigate its current technical challenges.