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Hong Kong stock market
BusinessBanking & Finance

In drama-packed day in Hong Kong stock market, big gainers in Wednesday’s ‘olive branch’ surge fall while derivatives trading is suspended over ‘connectivity’

  • MTR, Cathay Pacific, Sa Sa International see losses after big gains on Wednesday
  • US, China will talk trade next month and Beijing signals monetary easing, boosting mainland shares

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A police officer holds up a can of pepper spray as he searches a Mass Transit Railway train during a protest at Po Lam in Hong Kong. Photo: Reuters
Xie YuandDeb Price

Those big gainers in Wednesday’s surge on a hopeful moment about quieting unrest in Hong Kong broadly fell on Thursday, with Sa Sa International plunging 7.9 per cent.

The olive branch extended by city leader Carrie Lam – saying she would formally withdraw the radioactive bill that would have allowed extraditions to the mainland – fell far short of protesters’ demands. Violence broke out again at an MTR subway station, in which a station superviser was attacked by protesters and suffered injuries that led to his hospitalisation.

The Hang Seng spent much of the day above water, but then began a tumble mid-afternoon. It recovered some of its losses, closing down a teensy 0.03 per cent at 26,515.53.

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MTR – the owner and operator of the city’s subway – closed down 1.4 per cent to HK$46.7. Cathay Pacific, which continues to be caught up in protest fallout as well, lost 3.6 per cent to end at HK$10.3.

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Adding even more drama to the city’s stock market, Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing Limited, the operator of Asia’s third-largest capital market, suspended trading in the city’s derivatives market at 2pm local time, after reporting “connectivity issues” on its trading system.

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