Four Reasons to Buy China Tech, and One Fatal Snag

Chinese tech companies are suddenly hot.

The Hang Seng Tech Index has soared 23% this year, far outpacing the Nasdaq 100’s 5.3% gain. Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and Tencent Holdings Ltd.’s shares are back to their 2022 levels, while EV makers BYD Co. and Xiaomi Corp. hit new record highs.

The trillion-dollar question now is whether global investors late to the game can still chase the rally. While China’s big tech companies remain cheap by historical standards, buying them is not for the faint-hearted. Over the last five years, the investing world has undergone grief, anger and resignation as the government’s regulatory actions killed their golden goose.

But the vibe surrounding China is improving, and there are four good reasons to believe this rally has legs — with one major obstacle.

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First, the primary cause of Chinese tech’s loss of value in recent years has been regulatory crackdowns. Ironically, internet platforms’ political fortunes are improving as the economic slump drags on. Beijing now relies on Big Tech to provide income for people who have lost their jobs. The number of delivery drivers on Meituan almost tripled from 2018 to 2023, while licensed drivers on ride-hailing services more than doubled from 2021 to 2024, according to data provided by Gavekal Research. By 2023, China had 180 million self-employed workers, accounting for 30% of the non-agricultural work force. Tech has been crucial to their livelihoods.

Indeed, President Xi Jinping uncharacteristically attended a meeting with Jack Ma — the highest-profile casualty of the government’s campaign — and other prominent entrepreneurs on Monday in a show of support for the private sector after years of turmoil. Symbolically, it means Big Tech is no longer perceived as the villain that squeezed small businesses and choked young startups. The companies have become essential to social stability — partly resolving Beijing’s unemployment problem, especially with the young college graduates who might prefer live streaming and building personal brands to mind-numbing desk jobs.