Hong Kong, China — Chinese ecommerce giant Alibaba surged more than five percent in Hong Kong on Tuesday after it joined a program that makes it directly accessible to mainland investors.
Alibaba has underperformed the market in recent years owing to weak consumption and Beijing’s crackdown on the tech industry, with its Hong Kong-listed shares down more than 70 percent from its 2020 peak.
The Hangzhou-based firm last month reported a 29 percent drop in quarterly profits, citing sluggish Chinese consumer activity.
Chairman Joe Tsai said earlier this year that Alibaba planned to “tap into the southbound capital flow” via Stock Connect.
The program is open to institutional investors and individuals with at least 500,000 yuan (US$70,000) of assets in brokerage accounts.
Alibaba has been primarily traded in New York since 2014 and was dual-listed after going public in Hong Kong in 2019.