Chinese hard-tech companies — semiconductor makers, AI infrastructure firms, and advanced manufacturing equipment producers — added a combined RMB 2.1 trillion (US$289 billion) in market capitalization during the first half of 2026, driven by a surge in overseas institutional investment through the Stock Connect program and a government procurement push that is reshaping revenue models across the sector.
Why It Matters
For foreign companies with China operations, the hard-tech market surge is not a distant stock market story — it’s a supply-chain, competition, and partnership signal. The same companies attracting billions in overseas capital are becoming your suppliers, your customers, and increasingly, your direct competitors in third-country markets.
Through the Shanghai-Hong Kong and Shenzhen-Hong Kong Stock Connect programs, net foreign inflows into Chinese A-share hard-tech stocks reached RMB 184 billion in H1 2026, more than double the RMB 82 billion recorded in the same period of 2025. The STAR Market (科创板, kēchuàng bǎn) — China’s Nasdaq-style board for tech companies — saw its aggregate market cap rise 34% year-on-year, with semiconductor equipment makers leading the gains. As SCMP reported, the return of overseas capital marks a sharp reversal from the 2022–2024 exodus.
This capital isn’t speculative. It’s flowing into companies with real revenue growth: China’s top 20 listed semiconductor firms reported an average revenue increase of 28% in Q1 2026, driven by domestic substitution orders from Huawei, BYD, and state-owned enterprises that have been mandated to source 70% of their chip procurement domestically by 2027.
The Details
The surge has three engines. First, government procurement. In March 2026, the State Council expanded the “Secure and Controllable” (安全可控, ānquán kěkòng) procurement list from 18 product categories to 47, covering everything from industrial robots to lithography sub-systems. Government entities and state-owned enterprises must now prioritize listed suppliers, and in 14 of the 47 categories, they are required to purchase exclusively from domestic producers. The total value of covered procurement in 2026 is estimated at RMB 680 billion.
Second, overseas capital that fled during the 2022–2024 regulatory crackdown is returning — but selectively. Instead of the consumer internet platforms that dominated the 2020 bull run (Alibaba, Tencent, Meituan), global funds are targeting hardware and infrastructure: NAURA Technology Group (semiconductor equipment), Hygon Information Technology (server CPUs), and Cambricon Technologies (AI chips) saw foreign ownership increase by an average of 8 percentage points in H1 2026.
Third, export competitiveness is shifting. Chinese EV battery maker CATL now supplies 37% of the global market. In semiconductor tools, China’s AMEC and Naura have moved from 3% global market share in 2020 to 11% in 2026 in etch and deposition equipment. This isn’t just a domestic substitution story anymore — Chinese hard-tech firms are winning contracts from Samsung, TSMC, and Infineon.
But the surge also carries structural risks. The STAR Market’s average price-to-earnings ratio hit 62x in June 2026, compared to 28x for the Nasdaq 100. Over 40% of the revenue growth at China’s top 10 semiconductor equipment makers comes from government procurement — a customer that can change priorities with a single State Council meeting.
For context on how concentrated this surge is: the top five hard-tech firms by foreign inflow — NAURA, Hygon, Cambricon, AMEC, and Advanced Micro-Fabrication Equipment Inc. — accounted for 62% of all overseas capital entering the STAR Market in H1 2026. The remaining 400+ STAR-listed companies split the other 38%. This concentration means the capital isn’t betting on the sector broadly — it’s betting on companies that have already proven they can win government contracts and international customers simultaneously.
What You Should Do
Foreign companies operating in China need to track hard-tech market movements for three practical reasons:
- Supplier risk. If your China supply chain depends on components from a company that just got added to the “Secure and Controllable” list, expect priority allocation to shift toward government buyers. Diversify secondary sources now — the list expands again in December 2026.
- Competitive intelligence. Chinese hard-tech firms with fresh capital (NAURA raised RMB 12 billion in a June 2026 private placement) are expanding internationally. If you compete in semiconductor equipment, industrial automation, or advanced materials, track their overseas office openings — a pattern that signals imminent market entry in your region.
- Partnership opportunities. The capital surge is creating M&A targets. Several Chinese hard-tech firms are seeking foreign technology partners to accelerate their international expansion. If your company holds IP in advanced manufacturing, this is a window for joint ventures that were politically impossible during the 2022–2024 crackdown.
One Data Point
The number to remember: RMB 184 billion — net foreign capital flowing into Chinese hard-tech stocks in H1 2026. It’s more than the combined foreign inflows of 2024 and 2025. The market is voting. Your business strategy should take note.
Where to Go From Here
Understanding where capital flows in China tells you where policy, procurement, and talent are heading next. For analysis of specific sectors, see our China Semiconductor Industry Guide for Foreign Suppliers. If you’re evaluating a China manufacturing partnership, our China Factory Audit and Supplier Due Diligence Framework covers the operational side of supplier relationships.
— China Gateway 360 —
Remote China market entry support, built around execution.
