Hong Kong Markets Set for Second Weekly Decline
2026-03-13 02:02
By
Farida Husna
1 min. read
Hong Kong shares fell 225 points, or 0.9%, to 25,495 in Friday morning trade, marking a third straight decline after Wall Street’s overnight weakness.
The U.S.–Iran conflict entered its 14th day, with Tehran vowing to keep the world’s key oil chokepoint shut, while delayed U.S.
reserve deliveries fueled inflation worries.
In China, equities edged lower after two sessions of gains as traders awaited activity data for January–February, notably industrial output, retail sales, and the surveyed jobless rate, due next week.
Still, losses were partly contained by views that most macro risks are already priced in, with investors continuing to add undervalued names.
Selling pressure was evident across sectors in the city, with standout decliners including Orient Overseas (-7.2%), SenseTime (-5.2%), Cathay Pacific (-3.1%), Zijin Gold Intl.
(-2.6%), and SMIC (-1.7%).
The Hang Seng is on track for a second consecutive weekly decline, down about 1.0% so far.