Michael Burry Says Hong Kong Stocks Offer Value

By: difynews|2026/07/17 09:09:19

According to TechFlow, on July 17 investor Michael Burry said now is a strong time to look for undervalued stocks in Hong Kong, arguing the market could benefit as the appeal of South Korean, Japanese and semiconductor shares fades and capital rotates back into Hong Kong-listed names.

Burry, who became widely known for calling the 2008 U.S. subprime crisis, reportedly added to his position in JD.com earlier this month. His latest comments add to a broader constructive tone around Hong Kong equities from large financial institutions. Goldman Sachs Asia equity capital markets head Wang Yajun said the Hong Kong market has effectively entered an AI era, but that shift has not been fully captured by major indexes, creating a gap between underlying market activity and headline benchmark performance.

TechFlow also cited Morgan Stanley as taking a relatively upbeat view on Hong Kong stocks. At the same time, the report noted that weaker consumer spending and pressure on the e-commerce sector are still limiting the broader market outlook. That leaves the current bullish case centered more on valuation, sector rotation and selective positioning than on a clean macro recovery.

Why It Matters

The significance lies less in a single investor comment and more in the clustering of views. When Burry, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley all point to Hong Kong as a market where pricing may lag underlying themes, traders tend to pay closer attention to whether global capital is shifting across Asian risk assets. The AI angle also matters because it suggests investors are looking beyond traditional China reopening trades and toward a different leadership group inside Hong Kong. Still, the report does not provide fresh fund-flow data or a defined timeline for any re-rating.

WEEX View

For crypto markets, the direct link is limited, but the cross-asset read-through is worth watching. If Hong Kong attracts renewed institutional interest, exchange desks may also monitor whether regional liquidity conditions improve across other risk assets, including crypto proxies tied to AI, China narratives or Asia trading hours. That does not automatically translate into sustained digital-asset inflows, especially when equity allocation can absorb capital that might otherwise reach higher-beta tokens.

The next variables are practical ones: whether stronger sentiment shows up in actual turnover rather than commentary, whether Hong Kong tech names begin to outperform in a way that changes regional portfolio allocations, and whether stablecoin or fiat funding flows on trading venues reflect broader risk-on positioning in Asia. For centralized exchanges, the more relevant question is not Burry’s call itself, but whether it leads to measurable liquidity migration, tighter arbitrage conditions between equity-linked narratives and crypto, and renewed demand for Asia-focused trading pairs without forcing listing standards lower.

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