Latest News

CK Hutchison shares fall after China issues critical comments on the port sale to U.S. interest

The shares of Hong Kong conglomerate CK Hutchison fell more than 6% after China's Hong Kong Macau Affairs Office published a commentary on state media that criticized the company's sale of a port as a betrayal to China.

The Hong Kong-based group said last week it agreed to sell most of its global $22.8 billion ports business, including assets it holds along the strategically-important Panama Canal, to a group led by U.S. investment firm BlackRock.

The deal has been hailed by U.S. president Donald Trump who had called for the removal of the waterway from what he said was Chinese ownership.

The state-owned Ta Kung Pao, based in Hong Kong, published a comment on Thursday saying that the deal "betrays the Chinese people and sells them out", neglects national interest and shows CK Hutchison's "backbone" as well as his profit-seeking.

The column was also posted on the website of the State Council, China's highest-level authority overseeing Hong Kong affairs.

CK Hutchison is a Hong Kong-based and listed company owned by billionaire Li Kashing. The firm has insisted that its business operations remain independent of China.

The comment and the fall in CK Hutchison’s share price is an indication of the complicated geopolitical situation the company faces, amid Trump's pressure on China and investor fears that the deal may not have been backed by Beijing.

CK Hutchison and Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

After a drop of up to 6.7% during the early trading, its shares fell 4.6% by noon. The main Heng Sang Index rose 2.5%. Reporting by Clare Jim, James Pomfret and Editing by

(source: Reuters)