With China Sliding, Hong Kong ETF Gets Drubbed

The Hang Seng Index, the benchmark equity gauge in Hong Kong, finished lower last week, extending its one-month decline to 11.4%. The iShares MSCI Hong Kong ETF (NYSEArca: EWH) is responding with a dramatic one-month decline of its own, one equaling more than 13%.

Count EWH among the exchange traded funds that have been punished in the wake of China’s decision earlier this month to devalue its currency, the yuan. Global financial markets have been roiled after China let its renminbi currency depreciate, and some Asian emerging markets, along with country-specific exchange traded funds, will continue to feel the consequences of the weaker yuan.

A depreciating yuan makes Chinese exports more competitive in international markets. However, the beggar-thy-neighbor policy will negatively affect the country’s major trading partners. [Yuan Slide Slams EM ETFs]

Not surprisingly, slack Chinese economic data points are plaguing the Hang Seng.

“A report Friday showed a private gauge of Chinese manufacturing unexpectedly fell to the lowest level in more than six years, suggesting the world’s second-largest economy will need further policy support to stem a deepening slowdown. Concern that demand is weakening has driven a commodities rout that’s erased $2 trillion from the value of mining and oil companies since the middle of last year,” according to Bloomberg.