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Alibaba and WuXi AppTec decline in Hong Kong after addition to US blacklist

Designation of Chinese firms fuels investor unease, with markets bracing for potential Fed tightening and unwinding of AI trade

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The Hang Seng Index slipped in early Tuesday morning trade. Photo: Jelly Tse

Zhang Shidongin ShanghaiPublished: 10:49am, 9 Jun 2026

Alibaba Group Holding and pharmaceutical contractor WuXi AppTec fell on Tuesday after the US placed them and several other Chinese companies on a blacklist over alleged military links.

Alibaba slipped 0.3 per cent to HK$118.50 and WuXi AppTec tumbled 5.5 per cent to HK$114.60 in morning trading in Hong Kong. Other firms on the list, including electric vehicle (EV) maker Nio and tech giant Baidu, shrugged off the Trump administration’s move and rose after trading began. The Hang Seng Index eased 0.2 per cent.

Shanghai-listed shares of WuXi AppTec plunged 7.1 per cent to 89.06 yuan.

AdvertisementThe surprise designation unsettled investors already nervous about a possible interest-rate increase by the US Federal Reserve and the unwinding of the artificial intelligence trade. It also added to geopolitical risks, with the US-Israel war with Iran showing no signs of ending.

The Pentagon said the companies met statutory criteria for designation based on factors including alleged ties with Chinese state entities, military-civil fusion programmes, the People’s Liberation Army or government industrial initiatives. That spans a wide range of China’s most strategic emerging industries, from EVs and AI to batteries, biotech and solar.

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While the designation does not automatically trigger sanctions, it will make it harder for the companies to raise funds from the stock market or secure US government contracts.

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