Goldman Sachs cuts Hong Kong stocks in favor of mainland China AI hardware plays
CNBC Top News ·
Goldman Sachs is officially preferring mainland Chinese stocks to those traded in Hong Kong. The investment bank on Wednesday cut its rating on H shares to market-weight from overweight, while …
Goldman Sachs is officially preferring mainland Chinese stocks to those traded in Hong Kong. The investment bank on Wednesday cut its rating on H shares to market-weight from overweight, while staying overweight on mainland China's A shares — as a way to play artificial intelligence hardware. Most of China's AI semiconductor companies and their suppliers are traded on the mainland stock exchange. For a second time in a year, Goldman said it's raising its 12-month target on the CSI 300 — this time to 5,500, from 5,300 previously. That offers nearly 12% upside from Tuesday's close. The firm still expects 11% potential gains over the next 12 months for the H-share-heavy MSCI China index, but lowered it to market-weight in a regional context. So far this year, the Hang Seng Index is up about 1.5%, while the CSI 300 in mainland China has gained more than 6%. The underperformance is starker when looking at tech. The Hang Seng Tech index has fallen more than 5.5% year-to-date, while the Nasdaq-like ChiNext has surged more than 25% during that time. 'Hard tech' The divergence reflects how Beijing's AI policy has focused more on hardware development than models and software applications. AI hardware has driven 85% of the $3.8 trillion in Chinese AI equity market gains since the DeepSeek moment in January 2025, Goldman Sachs' Kinger Lau pointed out in the report. …
Original source: CNBC Top News