On June 23, Sany Heavy Industry (06031.HK) fell 3.09% in regular trading, trading at HKD 19.4/share, with turnover of HKD 80.16 million. The stock has extended its decline amid persistent selling pressure following the G7 summit's coordinated stance against Chinese construction machinery exports.
The G7 nations recently reached consensus to classify Chinese construction machinery as a sector exhibiting overcapacity and low-price dumping, with plans to implement coordinated trade restrictions including higher import tariffs, stricter anti-dumping investigations, and domestic equipment priority procurement legislation for government infrastructure projects. With over 60% of Sany's revenue derived from overseas markets, these measures directly threaten the company's export growth trajectory and margin outlook. Additionally, Japan's proposal for a joint G7 rare earth reserve mechanism and mandatory traceability audits on products containing rare earth permanent magnets would raise compliance costs for Sany's electric machinery lineup.
The broader Construction Machinery and Heavy Trucks sector declined in tandem, with Weichai Power down 4.59%, CRRC down 4.16%, Sinotruk down 4.14%, and Times Electric down 2.46%.
(The above content is based on publicly available market information, generated by a program or algorithm, and is intended solely as a stock movement alert. It does not constitute investment advice or a basis for trading decisions.)
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