Just a few months ago, China's technology sector appeared to be staging a comeback. The emergence of DeepSeek reignited investor enthusiasm around China's AI capabilities, fueling a sharp rally in internet and technology stocks. Today, much of that optimism has faded.
Many Chinese internet stocks have fallen back to levels seen before the DeepSeek-driven rally, leaving investors questioning whether the AI opportunity was overstated or whether the recent decline has created an attractive entry point.
What Happened?
The pullback appears to have less to do with company fundamentals and more to do with capital flows. Chinese regulators recently intensified scrutiny of offshore brokerage platforms that allowed mainland investors to access Hong Kong and overseas markets outside approved channels. Analysts estimate that close to $300 billion has been invested through these offshore brokerage platforms. While some of these funds may eventually be repatriated, the majority is expected to remain invested offshore.
At the same time, global investors have increasingly rotated toward AI beneficiaries in Taiwan and South Korea. Companies such as TSMC, Samsung Electronics, and SK Hynix have attracted significant inflows as investors sought direct exposure to AI infrastructure, semiconductors, and memory chips.
As a result, capital that might have flowed into Chinese internet companies instead moved toward the hardware side of the AI ecosystem.
Hong Kong Caught in the Middle
Hong Kong-listed Chinese internet companies have been particularly affected by these developments. For years, Hong Kong served as the primary gateway for investors seeking exposure to China's private technology sector. Giants such as Tencent, Alibaba, Meituan, JD.com, and Baidu benefited from both international capital and mainland investors looking for broader technology exposure.
The recent crackdown on offshore investment channels has reduced one source of demand, while the global AI trade has redirected capital toward markets perceived to be more directly linked to semiconductor production.
The result has been sustained pressure on Chinese internet stocks despite continued investment in artificial intelligence, cloud computing, and digital services.
Fundamentals Tell a Different Story
What makes the recent weakness notable is that many Chinese technology companies remain fundamentally strong. Alibaba, Tencent, Baidu, and other internet leaders continue to generate substantial cash flow, maintain dominant market positions, and invest aggressively in artificial intelligence. China's leading technology companies are increasingly integrating AI across cloud platforms, e-commerce ecosystems, advertising businesses, and enterprise software offerings.
Yet many of these stocks continue to trade well below historical valuation levels and at significant discounts to many global technology peers.
The potential sticking point for investors is the substantial increase in capex spending by Chinese internet companies on AI and AI infrastructure which is bound to erode free cash flow. However, we have seen this movie many times in the past with US and China technology companies spending ahead of major transformation. These bets have traditionally paid off in the long term.
Back to Pre-DeepSeek Prices
Perhaps the most striking observation is that many Chinese internet stocks have returned to prices seen before the DeepSeek announcement captured global attention.
In effect, the market appears to be assigning little lasting value to the progress China has made in AI over the past several months. This stands in contrast to semiconductor companies in Taiwan and South Korea, where AI-related optimism has driven substantial multiple expansion.
Both developments appear largely unrelated to company fundamentals. Chinese internet stocks remain near multi-year lows despite being among the primary beneficiaries of China's AI boom.
Opportunity or Value Trap?
The debate now centers on whether Chinese internet stocks represent a value opportunity or a market that deserves to trade at a discount. The bearish argument is that tighter capital controls, geopolitical uncertainty, and slower economic growth will continue to weigh on valuations.
The bullish argument is that investors are overlooking a group of highly profitable companies with strong balance sheets, significant AI capabilities, and dominant positions in one of the world's largest digital economies.
If AI adoption continues to accelerate and capital flow concerns stabilize, current valuations could prove attractive for long-term investors.
The Bottom Line
The recent decline in Chinese internet stocks appears to be driven primarily by capital flows rather than a deterioration in business fundamentals. Regulatory pressure on offshore investment channels and a powerful rotation into Taiwan and South Korean AI winners have pushed many Chinese technology companies back to pre-DeepSeek levels.
For investors willing to look beyond near-term sentiment, the current environment may offer an opportunity to gain exposure to some of China's leading AI companies at valuations that remain well below their historical averages and global peers.








