For dual-listed China-HK firms, the latest AH Premium Index indicates that Hong Kong-listed shares are more than 20 per cent cheaper on average than their mainland peers.

Shanghai

CHINESE investors more than doubled their Hong Kong stock purchases this year, braving market headwinds from violent street protests and the protracted Sino-US trade war, which have battered the Asian financial hub's economy.

Data from the Hong Kong Stock Exchange (HKEX) showed mainland investors had been net buyers of Hong Kong stocks for the nine months through to November, as they hunted for bargains in the wobbly US$4.5 trillion stock market.

Total net inflows via the Stock Connect linking mainland and Hong Kong in the Jan-Nov period amounted to about HK$208 billion (S$36 billion), versus about HK$83 billion (S$14 billion) for the full year of 2018, according to HKEX.

The months-long protests and their hit to sectors including tourism, retail and real estate have all contributed to the benchmark Hang Seng index's global underperformance this year.

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Mainland investors have been undeterred, though, seeing opportunities to buy on the dip when the overall appetite for risk is dampened and valuations of Hong Kong stocks hover near three-year lows.

For firms dual-listed in mainland China and Hong Kong, the latest AH Premium Index indicates Hong Kong-listed shares are more than 20 per cent cheaper on average than their mainland peers.

China's No 2 telecom equipment maker, ZTE Corp, for example, traded on Wednesday at 31.18 yuan (S$6.03) in Shenzhen, while selling at HK$20.90 (S$3.63) in Hong Kong, representing a near 40 per cent discount.

Still, there is a tendency to shun local Hong Kong firms and chase mainland companies whose business operations derive revenue and profits mainly from outside of Hong Kong.

Among mainland investors' darlings, Chinese food-delivery giant Meituan Dianping has seen its share price more than double this year, with upward momentum enhanced by its inclusion in the Stock Connect scheme.

Shares of another consumer bellwether, Haidilao International, also doubled this year, amid bets Beijing would roll out more measures to spur domestic consumption to shore up growth.

Mainland investors are playing an increasingly significant part in the Hong Kong stock market, owning stakes of 20 per cent or more in several dozen firms.

Analysts believe that there is still abundant room for their exposure to Hong Kong stocks to keep rising in the long run, as their overall holdings are far from dominant and as the listings of tech giants such as Alibaba boost the offshore market's attractiveness. REUTERS