KEY POINTS
  • Kuaishou soared in its Hong Kong debut this month, the latest Chinese tech company to shun U.S. exchanges and stay closer to home.
  • David Chao of DCM, which owns a stake worth about $16 billion in Kuaishou, said the trade war of the past four years is a big reason why China's tech leaders are choosing Hong Kong.
  • Tencent Music, which went public in 2018 on the NYSE, is gearing up for a second listing in Hong Kong.

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From left, the flags of the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, China and Hong Kong are seen flapping in the wind on May 6, 2019.

Venture firm DCM just generated a $16 billion return from the IPO of Chinese social media app Kuaishou. The listing took place in Hong Kong rather than in the U.S., and DCM co-founder David Chao expects China's most prominent tech start-ups to follow suit.

The primary reason, Chao says, is four years of the Trump Administration's "political bashing" of Chinese companies.

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