“Investor positioning is very, very light and expectations on earnings is quite conservative,” said Tai Hui, a strategist at JPMorgan Asset Management in Hong Kong. “I do think that China earnings can do OK this year. So, the bar to do well is quite low. That’s where people are looking into China.”
Investors focused on Ping An’s 21 per cent increase in the new business value, shrugging off a slight decrease in first-quarter profit.
“Life insurance business beat our estimates in terms of both profit and new business value,” said Nomura analysts after the earnings announcement in a note. The Japanese brokerage, which said first-quarter profit for Ping An was 4 per cent above its estimate, raised its price target for the stock to HK$54.41, implying an upside of almost 60 per cent from the current level.
Elsewhere, SenseTime Group, which makes chips for artificial intelligence (AI), rose as much as 36 per cent after releasing the latest version of its SenseNova generative AI model. The stocks surged 31 per cent to HK$0.80 before trading in its shares was suspended pending an exchange statement on possible inside information.
Elsewhere, Tianqi Lithium, a producer of the metal used for batteries powering electric vehicles, slumped 19 per cent to HK$28.50 after warning it could post a loss of as much as 4.3 billion yuan (US$593.4 million) in the first three months of the year.
Mobvoi, which makes speech recognition devices, declined 3.2 per cent from its IPO price to HK$3.68 on its trading debut in Hong Kong.
Other major Asian markets mostly rose. Japan’s Nikkei 225 climbed 2.4 per cent, while South Korea’s Kospi advanced 2 per cent, while Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 was little changed.
With additional reporting by Aileen Chuang.