The stock fell 4.8 per cent Monday and nearly reached Friday's low.
Tencent
Holdings added to Friday’s sharp decline to start the week, putting the
stock’s two-day loss of market value at $66 billion following America’s move to
ban residents from doing business with the company’s WeChat app.
The stock fell 4.8
per cent Monday and nearly reached Friday’s low. The cumulative 9.6 per cent
drop, the worst two days since October 2011, followed a four-month, 70 per cent
surge which put shares into record territory and made the internet giant Asia’s
most valuable company at nearly $700 billion.
Tech stocks in
Hong Kong led declines in the city Monday, with the Hang Seng Tech Index
falling as much as 3.6 per cent. The sector was also among the weakest
performers in China, with the ChiNext Index dropping as much as 2 per cent.
Suppliers to Apple Inc. saw some of the biggest declines.
Deteriorating
relations between the US and China are raising investor concerns about the
geopolitical impact on economies and markets. In addition to the WeChat
ban, Trump signed an order to prevent US residents from doing business with
ByteDance’s TikTok app starting in six weeks.
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