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Tariffs Weigh On Asian Stocks, Trip.com Reports Earnings

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Trip.com Earnings Review

Trip.com (TCOM US, 9961 HK) reported financial results after the US closed yesterday/before Hong Kong’s opening. Trip.com shares fell by -11.92% in Hong Kong after earnings guidance was a touch light along with margins. After a strong performance run, investors were quick to shoot first. Big picture, it is fascinating that Trip.com had revenue of RMB 35.6 billion in 2019, revenue then fell to RMB 18.3 billion in 2020 but subsequently rebounded in 2024 to RMB 53.3 billion ($7.3 billion). So, the company is making more revenue today than before COVID. Impressive, in my opinion, though clearly, my views are not universally held.

  • Revenue increased by +23% year-over-year (YoY) to RMB 12.7 billion ($1.7 billion) versus an estimate of RMB 12.3 billion and Q4 2023’s RMB 10.3 billion.
  • Adjusted Net Income was RMB 3 billion ($416 million) versus an estimate of RMB 2.9 billion and Q4 2023’s RMB 2.7 billion.
  • Adjusted EPS was RMB 4.35 ($3.59) versus an estimate of RMB 4.19 and Q4 2023’s RMB 4.
  • The company announced a new $400 million stock buyback and a $0.30 per share dividend.

Key News

Asian equities were a sea of red as President Trump “appears” to be pushing forward with tariffs on Canada and Mexico, while the Philippines was closed for Revolution Day.  

US stocks' indifference to tariff talk is fascinating to me. US-listed China stocks dramatically fell yesterday after President Trump suggested replicating and/or strengthening Biden’s technology export controls. We do not yet know whether this is simply the "Art of The Deal", which would allow the Hawks to establish the worst-case scenario or actual policy that will be implemented. I believe the former, as, despite all the headlines, the Hong Kong growth and technology stock rally was overdue for a correction and pullback. However, the question remains as to whether investors stay on the sidelines or step in. It is easier to say buy low than to actually do it, though I suspect professional investors, who, based on the below analysis, have no choice but to get involved due to their significant underweight to the space.

One sign that this is simply a negotiation tactic is that Tesla has been allowed to push out its autonomous driving function in China today. Considering Trump's relationship with Tesla, harming and not helping Tesla would seem logical if we are headed to replicating “The Grapes of Wrath”, i.e. the economic policies that prolonged the Great Depression in the United States.

After the close, Chinese media noted that DeepSeek was launching its R2 AI model, which only highlights the prior administration’s effort to hobble Chinese technology growth, which failed.

Hong Kong stocks were not off remotely as much, as Hong Kong’s most heavily traded stocks by value included Alibaba, down -3.76% versus the US ADR yesterday down -10.23%, Tencent, down -2.49% versus its unsponsored ADR down -7.6%, Xiaomi, up +3.1% as electric vehicle (EV) stocks rallied, Semiconductor Manufacturing International (SMIC), down -1.45%, Meituan, down -4.74%, and Li Auto, up +12.52% versus its ADR down -4.01%. Another example would be JD.com, which was down -3.79% in Hong Kong versus its ADR yesterday, which fell -7.33%. Large-cap stocks were off, with insurance, banks, software, telecommunication, and oil all lower on high volumes and poor breath.

Hong Kong volumes have increased significantly since September One factor has been an increase in trading through Southbound Stock Connect, which allows Mainland investors to buy stocks in Hong Kong. Today, 49% of Hong Kong's volume was from Southbound Connect. Mainland investors bought a healthy $2.8 million worth of Hong Kong-listed stocks via Southbound Stock Connect, and Alibaba saw another major inflow.

The only bigger macroeconomic news was the release of the “Law on the Promotion of the Private Economy” in advance of the Dual Sessions. Mainland China was off as mega-capitalization stocks in banking, energy, beverage, and insurance weighed down on indices. Breadth was off, while volumes were very high at RMB 1.88 trillion. Several banks announced cutting their deposit rates. The Mainland market is clearly indicating more policy support is needed.

We’ve previously hosted Copley Fund Research’s Steven Holden. He tracks the holdings of actively managed funds. He recently posted on LinkedIn a look at 334 actively managed global equity funds’ China allocation. These funds are benchmarked to the MSCI All Country World Index, which had a 66.41% US weight versus 2.68% weight to China as of January 31, 2025. Shockingly, 25% of the funds had ZERO exposure to China, while 89% had less than a 5% exposure. Since bottoming in January 2024, Chinese growth & technology stocks have outperformed the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 by 2X. The 4th largest country in ACWI starts with a C and ends in A but isn't the 2nd largest economy in the world but 10th largest… Canada. Meanwhile, China is only the 5th largest country by weight. It appears that approximately 77% of 344 funds have a weight of less than 3% to China. In my opinion, this means a great deal of dry powder to use to increase an allocation. Check out Steven’s work on LinkedIn and his website, copleyfundresearch.com.

The Hang Seng and Hang Seng Tech indexes fell -1.32% and -1.57%, respectively, on volume that decreased -7.44% from yesterday, which is 221% of the 1-year average. 101 stocks advanced, while 393 declined. Main Board short turnover increased by 2.59% from yesterday, which is 222% of the 1-year average, as 15% 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 fell less than growth and small capitalization stocks. Technology gained +1.68% while consumer discretionary fell -3.28%, communication services fell -2.63%, and consumer staples fell -2.25%. The top sub-sectors were national defense, consumer services, and technology hardware, while consumer discretionary distribution, media, and consumer staples distribution were the worst. Southbound Stock Connect volumes were very high/well above the average as Mainland investors bought a healthy $2,833 million of Hong Kong stocks and ETFs, with Alibaba a large net sell, Tencent and Li Auto a large/moderate net buy, SMIC a moderate net buy, Xiaomi small net buy, China Mobile a small net sell, Meituan and Hua Hong Semi moderate net sells.

Shanghai, Shenzhen, and the STAR Board diverged to close -0.80%, -0.82%, and +0.26%, respectively, on volume down -8.9% from yesterday, which is 166% of the 1-year average. 1,464 stocks advanced, while 3,549 declined. Growth and small capitalization stocks fell less than value and large capitalization stocks. All sectors were negative, led lower by consumer staples down -1.89%, communication services down -1.81%, and materials down -1.37%. Top sub-sectors were led higher by construction machinery, power generation equipment, and industrial machinery, while agricultural, cultural media, and office supplies were worst. Northbound Stock Connect volumes were high/above the average. CNY and the Asia dollar index fell versus the US dollar. Treasury bond prices rallied. Copper gained, and steel fell.

Last Night's Performance

Country/IndexTicker1-Day Change
China (Hong Kong)HSI Index-1.3%
Hang Seng TechHSTECH Index-1.6%
Hong Kong TurnoverHKTurn Index-7.4%
HK Short Sale TurnoverHKSST Index2.6%
Short Turnover as a % of HK TurnovrN/A15.4%
Southbound Stock Connect Net Buy/Sell (US $ Millions)N/A0
China (Shanghai)SHCOMP Index-0.8%
China (Shenzhen)SZCOMP Index-0.8%
China (STAR Board)Star50 Index0.3%
Mainland Turnover.chturn Index-8.9%
Nouthbound Stock Connect Net Buy/Sell (US $ Millions)N/ANot Available
Jing Daily China Global Luxury IndexCHINALUX Index-0.6%
JapanNKY Index-1.4%
IndiaSENSEX Index0.2%
IndonesiaJCI Index-2.4%
MalaysiaFBMKLCI Index-1%
PakistanKSE100 Index0.1%
PhilippinesPCOMP Index-0.5%
South KoreaKOSPI Index-0.6%
TaiwanTWSE Index-1.2%
ThailandSET Index-2.4%
SingaporeSTI Index-0.3%
AustraliaAS51 Index-0.7%
VietnamVNINDEX Index-0.1%
MSCI China All Shares Index# of StocksAverage 1-Day Change (%)
Hong Kong Listed152-2.12
Communication Services9-2.63
Consumer Discretionary30-3.28
Consumer Staples13-2.25
Energy7-0.13
Financials23-1.73
Health Care13-0.2
Industrials19-1.35
Information Technology101.68
Materials10-1.77
Real Estate6-1
Utilities12-1.02
Mainland China Listed432-1.12
Communication Services9-1.8
Consumer Discretionary31-0.76
Consumer Staples27-1.87
Energy16-0.59
Financials63-1.31
Health Care40-1.27
Industrials69-0.88
Information Technology85-0.72
Materials68-1.36
Real Estate7-0.39
Utilities17-1.01
US & Hong Kong Dually ListedTicker1-Day Change (%)
Tencent HK700 HK Equity-2.5
Alibaba HK9988 HK Equity-3.8
JD.com HK9618 HK Equity-3.8
NetEase HK9999 HK Equity-1.8
Yum China HK9987 HK Equity1.4
Baozun HK9991 HK Equity-10.4
Baidu HK9888 HK Equity-3.9
Autohome HK2518 HK Equity-3.6
Bilibili HK9626 HK Equity-7.6
Trip.com HK9961 HK Equity-11.9
EDU HK9901 HK Equity-5.1
Xpeng HK9868 HK Equity4.4
Weibo HK9898 HK Equity-4.1
Li Auto HK2015 HK Equity12.5
Nio Auto HK9866 HK Equity0.4
Zhihu HK2390 HK Equity-4.2
KE HK2423 HK Equity-1
Tencent Music Entertainment HK1698 HK Equity-9.1
Meituan HK3690 HK Equity-4.7
Hong Kong's Most Heavily Traded by Value 1-Day Change (%)
ALIBABA GROUP HOLDING LTD-3.8
TENCENT HOLDINGS LTD-2.5
XIAOMI CORP-CLASS B3.1
SEMICONDUCTOR MANUFACTURING-1.5
MEITUAN-CLASS B-4.7
LI AUTO INC-CLASS A12.5
BYD CO LTD-H-0.5
TRIP.COM GROUP LTD-11.9
HUA HONG SEMICONDUCTOR LTD-6.5
CHINA MOBILE LTD-1.2
Shanghai and Shenzhen's Most Heavily Traded by Value 1-Day Change (%)
TALKWEB INFORMATION SYSTEM-A-10
SHIJIAZHUANG CHANGSHAN BEI-A2.5
DHC SOFTWARE CO LTD -A-8.7
INESA INTELLIGENT TECH INC-A7.8
CHINA GREATWALL TECHNOLOGY-A5.9
CAMBRICON TECHNOLOGIES-A1.3
ZTE CORP-A-3
EAST MONEY INFORMATION CO-A-1.7
OFILM GROUP CO LTD-A3.9
BEIJING ENLIGHT MEDIA CO L-A-9.6

Last Night's Exchange Rates, Prices, & Yields

  • CNY per USD 7.25 versus 7.25 yesterday
  • CNY per EUR 7.62 versus 7.59 yesterday
  • Yield on 10-Year Government Bond 1.73% versus 1.76% yesterday
  • Yield on 10-Year China Development Bank Bond 1.74% versus 1.77% yesterday
  • Copper Price +0.22%
  • Steel Price -0.70%