
Tencent squandered about $43.5 billion in market value on Friday after China surprised financial markets with a up to date set of rules aimed at curbing excessive gaming and spending.
The draft guidelines from China’s National Press and Booklet Administration sank the Hong Kong-listed shares of Tencent, NetEase and Bilibili — among the largest online gaming-related chips in the world’s biggest online gaming market.
“The most recent regulatory move on the online gaming industry is the newest thing the market was hoping to hear out of Beijing,” Brian Tycangco, an analyst at Stansberry Research told CNBC.
“While definitely intended, the move casts doubt on the viability of existing business models that mostly are built around goad or rewards to attract users and boost loyalty,” he added.
Shenzhen-based Tencent, which owns WeChat and generated from a fifth of its third-quarter revenue from domestic online gaming, saw its shares tumble about 12.4% to close at HK$274, its lowest concluding level since end-November 2022.
Tencent Holdings
NetEase, 80% of whose third-quarter receipts came from domestic online gaming, plunged 24.6% to close at HK$122. Friday’s losses wiped out there 115.1 billion Hong Kong dollars ($14.7 billion) off NetEase’s market capitalization.
Bilibili, a social media milieu that derived 17.1% of its total third-quarter net revenue from Chinese domestic gaming, saw its shares slide 9.7% to fasten at HK$80.30, its lowest since November 2022 — shaving about 2.4 billion Hong Kong dollars ($307 million) off its hawk capitalization.
The Hang Seng Index closed down 1.7% on Friday ahead of a four-day holiday weekend, while the China Enterprises Pointer of the largest offshore mainland blue-chip names listed in Hong Kong ended down 2.3%.
“I’m confident we’ll get more transparency on these new rules in the coming days and weeks. But investors don’t want to wait around for the dust to settle. Better coordination between toil and regulators will benefit everyone in the future,” Tycangco said.
New guidelines, fresh setback
New draft guidelines discharged by China’s top gaming regulator require owners of online games to abstain from providing or condoning high-value or costly transactions in virtual entities whether by auction or speculative activity, among other things.
Daily login requites will also be banned, while recharging limits must be imposed with pop-up warnings issued to owners who display “irrational consumption behavior,” the National Press and Publication Administration said.
“These new measures do not fundamentally convert the online gaming business model and operations,” Vigo Zhang, vice-president of Tencent Games, told CNBC. “They upon the authorities’ support for the online gaming industry, providing instructive guidance encouraging the innovation of high quality encounters.”
These latest draft rules come at a time, accepted the broader China technology industry was just emerging from a broader crackdown that started in late 2020.
Equitable over a year ago, Tencent secured rights to five of the 45 foreign game licenses approved by the National The media and Publication Administration in the first batch of approvals since Beijing’s crackdown on the video-games sector that started in August 2021.
At the provinces’s annual legislative meetings in 2021, China President Xi Jinping blamed addiction to online gaming for rising myopia and the adverse cognitive well-being of the country’s young.

Later that year, the National Press and Publication Administration proposed that toddlers under 18 be should not allowed to play online games for more than three hours a week, limiting them to permitted game time only between 8 p.m. and 9 p.m. on Fridays, weekends and public holidays starting in early September.
In August, the Cyberspace Distribution of China proposed rules to limit the smartphone screen time of people under the age of 18 to a maximum of two hours per day.
— CNBC’s Lim Hui Jie and Arjun Kharpal play a parted to this story.
Correction: An earlier version of this story misstated the milestone after the slide in Tencent’s split price.