
Decoupling may offer silver lining for IPOs in Hong Kong
As their trade war heats up, experts and industry insiders are fretting how China and the United States may escalate beyond tit-for-tat tariffs. A full-blown decoupling may be extreme, but is not beyond the realm of possibility.
Advertisement
One worsening sign is that US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has warned that the option of delisting US-traded Chinese companies is now back on the table.
Should that happen, it would indeed become a major disassociation between the equities markets of the world's two biggest economies.
Ironically, Hong Kong's capital market may benefit in such an outcome.
Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po has already instructed the Securities and Futures Commission and the local stock exchange to prepare the best conditions for such a 'homecoming'.
Advertisement
An estimated US$1.1 trillion in the market capitalisation of nearly 300 Chinese companies, listed on the New York Stock Exchange, Nasdaq and NYSE American, would all be exposed, according to the congressional US-China Economic and Security Review Commission. Things can get worse from here.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong's stablecoin ambitions offer Beijing a channel to bring yuan into crypto world
China is not a fan of cryptocurrencies. Over the past decade, the Chinese government has built up one of the world's most hostile regulatory frameworks against cryptocurrency-related activities, including trading and mining. Beijing views digital assets like bitcoin as a threat to the country's financial stability and capital account controls, and even a challenge to the nation's currency sovereignty. Advertisement In the face of challenges from bitcoin and other privately-issued digital currencies such as Facebook's Diem, formally known as Libra, China's central bank has started to promote the use of a 'sovereign' digital yuan. But the digital yuan 'experiment' has for years struggled to find relevance as a form of payment in domestic and international transactions. Against this backdrop, Beijing's tolerance of and supportive attitude towards the stablecoin ambitions of Hong Kong is interesting to observe. Last month, the city's lawmakers passed the Stablecoins Bill , which will take effect later this year, paving the way for stablecoins backed by the Hong Kong dollar and other assets in the city. The green light comes at a time when the second administration of US President Donald Trump has adopted a friendly stance towards stablecoins, a type of cryptocurrency that maintains a fixed value by being pegged to a reference asset such as the US dollar. This photo illustration shows Chinese 100 yuan notes and US 100 dollar notes, in Beijing on April 8, 2025. Photo: AFP China is taking notice. While Beijing has yet to make any official comment on stablecoins, there are research papers making the argument that stablecoins, backed by US dollar assets, represent an extension of US dollar hegemony in the blockchain realm. Advertisement The world's top-10 stablecoins in terms of market capitalisation are all backed by US dollar assets, except Pax Gold that is backed by gold. There are also stablecoins backed by euro assets, but the market cap of these is tiny compared to US dollar ones.


RTHK
3 hours ago
- RTHK
US stocks end higher in spite of higher tariffs
US stocks end higher in spite of higher tariffs Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Photo: AFP US stocks shook off a gloomy start to the week to close higher on Monday, with traders looking through the new trade uncertainty fuelled by President Donald Trump's recent tariff threats. On Friday, Trump unleashed a new fear into the financial markets, threatening to double steel tariffs from 25 percent to 50 percent. But by Monday afternoon, traders were adopting a more buoyant mood, with all three major indices on Wall Street closing higher. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed up 0.1 percent at 42,305.48, while the broad-based S&P 500 finished up 0.4 percent at 5,935.94. The tech-rich Nasdaq Composite also rose, climbing 0.7 percent to 19,242.61 amid enthusiasm about the impact of AI on profits. "I think we are seeing a bit of continuation of the positive interpretation of the market from Nvidia's earnings," Angelo Kourkafas from Edward Jones told AFP, referring to the chip titan's recent strong results. "Artificial intelligence remains a powerful driver for earnings," he continued, adding that the financial markets had become "a little insensitive" to the constant tariff threats from the White House. "We are moving away from the worst case scenarios," he said. While the broader markets finished higher, the steel tariff news hit auto makers hard, with both Ford and General Motors finishing the day down 3.9 percent. (AFP)


South China Morning Post
6 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
UK's defence overhaul puts focus on a ‘more lethal' Nato, highlights China, Russia threats
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer's government outlined a new defence strategy on Monday that aims to put a 'stronger, more lethal' Nato at the forefront of British defence plans as the country boosts its nuclear deterrent, rebuilds munitions and weapons stockpiles and invests billions of pounds into technologically advanced warfare methods. Advertisement The new defence strategy warns that the threats the UK faces 'are more serious and less predictable than at any time since the Cold War'. Here's how the UK plans to shift from a long period of underinvestment and a peacetime mentality to become ready for war, as detailed in Monday's 140-page document. Nuclear The report recommends that Britain should begin discussions with the US and Nato on the 'potential benefits and feasibility of enhanced UK participation in Nato's nuclear mission'. The government wants to achieve this by renewing its existing nuclear deterrent, investing £15 billion (US$20 billion) in its warhead programme, and exploring other means of deterring enemy use of nuclear weapons - which could include buying fighter jets capable of firing nuclear bombs. The review is explicit in the need for Britain to play a greater role in nuclear deterrence, as the only European country to assign its nuclear capability to the defence of Nato – something that France does not currently do. The need for stepped-up UK action is driven by 'the unprecedented challenge' of the US facing two 'near-peer' nuclear powers in Russia and China, the report said. With Trident already absorbing much of the UK's defence expenditure, the policy is likely to be expensive. As well as the investment in nuclear warheads, Britain plans to build as many as 12 new submarines. Russia, China warnings