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Home»Investing
Investing

Dividends Are This Year’s Stocking Stuffer

News RoomBy News RoomDecember 18, 2024No Comments4 Mins Read
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Key News

Asian markets were mixed overnight before today’s hawkish US Fed cut as South Korea outperformed, while Pakistan was down -3.41%, bringing its year-to-date return to +80%.

Surprisingly, there is little commentary on whether the PBOC will cut rates as the Loan Prime Rate will be announced tomorrow, while the medium-term lending facility rate date hasn’t been released yet. The PBOC mimicking a Fed cut might limit currency depreciation versus the US dollar. An argument against the cut would be the action taken overnight by the PBOC to rein in speculation on China’s 10-year Treasury bond. The yield on the 10 Year Treasury bond intra-day fell to another all-time low of 1.721%, which is a 0.48% move from yesterday’s close before the PBOC called in traders in the early afternoon to say “no mas,” which led to a closing yield of 1.765% which is up +2.06% from yesterday’s close. A 250bps intra-day move is significant.

Hong Kong and Mainland China rebounded from oversold territory following the current pullback following the post-Politburo release spike. The market has continued in an uptrend since its January bottom, with higher highs and higher lows, though the two steps forward and one back are a bit frustrating.

Dividend stocks had a strong day following the concise release “Several Opinions on Improving and Strengthening the Management of Market Value of Central Enterprises Holding Listed Companies” from the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission (SASAC). The administrative fee companies have to pay dividends was cut. In addition to the “recommendation” that SOEs pay dividends, Mainland media reported that more than two hundred companies have taken out bank loans to buy back stock following the September policy announcement.

Semiconductor stocks rallied following chatter that President Biden will tighten export controls on his way out as US semiconductor companies’ loss is another company’s gain. Volumes were light as Hong Kong growth stocks didn’t rally as much as US-listed China ADRs overnight.

Brilliance Auto led Automobile stocks higher after the company raised its dividend payout to double-digit yields. Mainland investors bought $266 million of Hong Kong stocks today via Southbound Stock Connect. There was some chatter that Alibaba could use the sale proceeds of the department store chain Intime as a special dividend. The dearth of coverage on Chinese company’s shareholder-friendly buybacks and dividends is a bit perplexing. Job security for me, I suppose!

The Hang Seng and Hang Seng Tech gained +0.83% and +1.82%, respectively, on volume down -18.52% from yesterday, which is 82% of the 1-year average. 358 stocks advanced, while 121 declined. Main Board short turnover decreased by -46% from yesterday, which is 75% of the 1-year average, as 14% of turnover was short turnover (Hong Kong short turnover includes ETF short volume, which is driven by market makers’ ETF hedging). Value and large capitalization stocks outperformed growth and small capitalization stocks. All sectors were higher as technology gained +2.34%, utilities gained +2.04%, and healthcare gained +1.8%. The top sub-sectors were buildings, automobiles, and machinery, while the chemical industry, industry conglomerates, and paper were the worst. Southbound Stock Connect volumes were just above September pre-stimulus levels as Mainland investors bought $266 million of Hong Kong stocks and ETFs with XtalPi, Xiaomi, Robosense, CNOOC, and CCB were small net buys, China Mobile a moderate net buy, Tencent and Meituan were small net sells.

Shanghai, Shenzhen, and the STAR Board diverged +0.62%, +0.58%, and +1.47%, respectively, on volume down -9.89% from yesterday, which is 133% of the 1-year average. 1,773 stocks advanced, while 2,127 declined. Value and large capitalization stocks outperformed growth and small capitalization stocks. The top sectors were technology, up +1.19%, communication services, up +0.97%, and utilities, up +0.79%, while real estate fell -0.63% and industrials fell -0.03%. The top sub-sectors were semiconductors, internet, and computer hardware, while office supplies, forest, and catering were the worst. Northbound Stock Connect volumes were slightly above average. CNY and the Asia dollar index were off small versus the US dollar. Treasury bond prices fell. Copper and steel fell.

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Post-Election Recap: Trump’s Man in Beijing Discusses U.S.-China Relations

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Last Night’s Performance

Last Night’s Exchange Rates, Prices, & Yields

CNY per USD 7.28 versus 7.28 yesterday

CNY per EUR 7.64 versus 7.64 yesterday

Yield on 10-Year Government Bond 1.76% versus 1.72% yesterday

Yield on 10-Year China Development Bank Bond 1.84% versus 1.79% yesterday

Copper Price -0.71%

Steel Price -0.80%

Read the full article here

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