Hong Kong equities opened lower on Friday as renewed selling across Asian semiconductor shares interrupted the technology-led recovery seen during the previous session. The Hang Seng Index slipped during early trading, while investors assessed rising oil prices, renewed conflict in the Middle East and questions surrounding the sustainability of the global artificial intelligence investment boom.
Technology rebound loses momentum
The Hang Seng Index stood at approximately 24,969 shortly after the opening bell, down around 0.2 per cent from Thursday’s close. Selling subsequently strengthened, taking the benchmark about 1 per cent lower during the morning session.
The weaker opening followed a strong Thursday performance, when the Hang Seng gained 1.3 per cent and the Hang Seng Tech Index advanced 2 per cent. Alibaba, Baidu and Meituan had been among the largest contributors to that rally, supported by investors rotating away from semiconductor hardware and towards Chinese internet companies.
Friday’s session showed that the rotation remained fragile. A broad sell-off in Asian chipmakers revived concerns that valuations linked to artificial intelligence had risen too quickly, particularly as investors considered whether planned production capacity could eventually exceed demand.
Oil adds another layer of uncertainty
Energy markets also influenced sentiment. Brent crude approached $85 per barrel after renewed hostilities involving the United States and Iran raised fears of further disruption around the Strait of Hormuz.
Higher oil prices present a mixed outlook for Hong Kong-listed companies. Energy producers may benefit from stronger commodity prices, but airlines, transport operators, manufacturers and consumer businesses face the prospect of higher operating costs.
Oil was heading towards a weekly increase of more than 11 per cent, its largest advance since April. That movement encouraged investors to reduce exposure to businesses most vulnerable to inflation and weaker consumer spending.
Mainland developments remain in focus
Investors were also monitoring China’s capital markets after the $8.6 billion Shanghai share offering by memory-chip producer ChangXin Memory Technologies attracted substantial but less feverish demand than some recent technology listings.
The offering was more than 200 times subscribed by retail investors, but its reception added to questions about liquidity and lofty semiconductor valuations. The STAR 50 Index has fallen sharply from its early-July peak, creating an increasingly cautious background for technology investment.
A defensive end to the week
Hong Kong’s early decline reflected a broader shift towards defensive positioning across Asia. Gold strengthened, oil remained elevated and regional technology shares encountered sustained selling pressure.
The Hang Seng remained above levels recorded earlier in the year, but Friday’s opening demonstrated that recent gains could be vulnerable to changes in global risk appetite. Investors are likely to watch developments in the Gulf, movements in oil prices and the performance of Chinese technology companies before establishing a clearer direction for the coming week.
Newshub Editorial in Asia – 17 July 2026

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