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October 22, 2014

Hong Kong Stocks Defy Protests to Post World’s Best Gain

By Kana Nishizawa and Weiyi Lim

October 22, 2014 12:41 AM EDT
Pro-democracy protesters watch Alex Chow, secretary general of the Hong Kong Federation of Students, as he is projected onto a large screen during a live televised talk between pro-democracy student leaders and the government outside the Central Government Offices in the Admiralty business district of Hong Kong, China, on Oct. 21, 2014.
Photographer: Brent Lewin/Bloomberg
Pro-democracy protesters watch Alex Chow, secretary general of the Hong Kong Federation of Students, as he is projected onto a large screen during a live televised talk between pro-democracy student leaders and the government outside the Central Government Offices in the Admiralty business district of Hong Kong, China, on Oct. 21, 2014.








Hong Kong stocks are beating every other developed market in the world this month as lower valuations shelter shares from a global selloff and the city’s worst political unrest since the 1960s.
The MSCI Hong Kong Index rallied 3.1 percent in October through yesterday, the most among 23 developed markets tracked by MSCI Inc. and one of only two to gain. The measure is poised to erase its loss since police fired tear gas at pro-democracy demonstrators on Sept. 28, rising 0.6 percent, compared with a 3.2 percent slump by the MSCI World Index in the same period.