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Risk Warning on Trading HK Stocks
Despite Hong Kong's robust legal and regulatory framework, its stock market still faces unique risks and challenges, such as currency fluctuations due to the Hong Kong dollar's peg to the US dollar and the impact of mainland China's policy changes and economic conditions on Hong Kong stocks.
HK Stock Trading Fees and Taxation
Trading costs in the Hong Kong stock market include transaction fees, stamp duty, settlement charges, and currency conversion fees for foreign investors. Additionally, taxes may apply based on local regulations.
HK Non-Essential Consumer Goods Industry
The Hong Kong stock market encompasses non-essential consumption sectors like automotive, education, tourism, catering, and apparel. Of the 643 listed companies, 35% are mainland Chinese, making up 65% of the total market capitalization. Thus, it's heavily influenced by the Chinese economy.
HK Real Estate Industry
In recent years, the real estate and construction sector's share in the Hong Kong stock index has notably decreased. Nevertheless, as of 2022, it retains around 10% market share, covering real estate development, construction engineering, investment, and property management.
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Copper closed December 31, 2025 near $5.6 per pound, finishing the year more than 40% higher and marking one of its strongest annual performances on record.
Copper closed December 31, 2025 near $5.6 per pound, finishing the year more than 40% higher and marking one of its strongest annual performances on record.
Unlike past rallies tied to booming industrial demand, this surge was fueled primarily by trade positioning and tightening supply, not a broad-based consumption rebound.
A defining feature of 2025 was the aggressive relocation of physical copper into the United States. Throughout the second half of the year, traders and manufacturers pulled forward imports to build inventories ahead of expected tariffs from the incoming Trump administration. This pre-emptive buying distorted traditional trade routes.
The result was a sharp drawdown in Asian and European warehouse stocks, while U.S. inventories swelled. Prices responded accordingly, reflecting scarcity outside the U.S. rather than a synchronized pickup in end demand.
Supply stress amplified the price impact of these trade maneuvers. In Chile, the world's largest copper producer, output fell to its lowest level in two decades, pressured by declining ore grades and persistent water shortages. Earlier in the year, a major mine closure in Panama removed roughly 1.5% of global supply, further tightening balances.
These disruptions left little buffer in a market already grappling with limited new mine development, turning logistical shocks into outsized price moves.
Beneath the surface, fundamental demand offered little confirmation of a traditional bull cycle. China's property sectorcontinued to struggle through 2025, and global manufacturing PMIs spent much of Q4 in contraction territory. Outside tariff-driven stockpiling, consumption growth remained subdued.
This disconnect underscores how the 2025 rally was shaped more by who needed copper where, rather than how much copper the global economy was actually using.
Looking ahead, analysts expect market distortions to persist. The U.S. premium, the price gap between New York's Comex and London's LME, hit record highs in December 2025, reflecting the extreme pull of metal into the U.S. Goldman Sachs expects this volatility to extend into early 2026 as trade policies are formalized.
Despite weak demand signals, several banks have raised 2026 price forecasts, citing structural scarcity and limited mine supply. Consensus targets for mid-2026 now cluster between $5.60 and $6.00 per pound, driven by a growing view that the world is simply running out of mineable copper.
For now, copper's strength reflects a market dominated by policy risk and supply constraints, not a classic industrial upswing, an imbalance likely to keep prices elevated and volatile into the new year.

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