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iShares MSCI China ETF (NYSEARCA:MCHI) is down 8.74% year-to-date, giving back most of a strong 2025 rally that had investors excited about a Chinese equity recovery. The fund exists to solve a specific access problem: most investors cannot easily buy shares on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange or mainland Chinese markets, so MCHI packages that exposure into a single U.S.-listed ETF tracking the MSCI China Index. But access and performance are two different things, and right now the performance side is under real pressure.
The past month tells the story clearly. MCHI has fallen 9.64% in the last 30 days, roughly in line with the S&P 500’s 8.52% one-month decline, but for very different reasons. U.S. equities are pulling back on recession fears and tariff uncertainty. Chinese equities are dealing with all of that plus a separate layer of geopolitical risk that is uniquely their own. The fund’s internet-heavy peer, KraneShares CSI China Internet ETF, has fared worse, down 18.03% year-to-date, which makes MCHI’s broader diversification look like a buffer in this environment.
U.S.-China trade policy is the dominant force acting on this fund. When the Trump administration announced plans to double existing tariffs on Chinese goods in early 2025, MCHI’s sentiment score turned somewhat-bearish, and when retaliatory tariffs followed in April 2025, the fund took direct hits alongside peers. China internet ETFs fell between 5.9% and 8.1% in a single session during that escalation.
The key signal to watch is not the tariff rate itself but whether negotiations open or close. Any credible signal of trade talks resuming has historically triggered sharp recoveries in Chinese equity ETFs. A new round of tariff announcements or retaliatory measures from Beijing tends to produce fast, steep drawdowns. The U.S. Trade Representative’s office publishes tariff actions and trade policy updates at ustr.gov, and the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative releases formal Federal Register notices for any new tariff schedules. Those sources provide the earliest available read on escalation or de-escalation.
The single most important ETF-specific factor is the outsized role Tencent plays in MCHI’s portfolio. Tencent represents 16.35% of the fund, and the top two holdings combined account for roughly 26.89% of assets. For a fund with $7.4 billion in AUM spread across 500-plus securities, that level of concentration at the top means Tencent’s earnings results, regulatory standing in China, and any changes to its MSCI index weight can move the whole fund in a meaningful way.
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Tencent reports quarterly earnings, and those releases are the clearest window into whether the fund’s largest bet is working. Beyond earnings, watch the MSCI China Index’s semi-annual rebalance reviews, which determine whether Tencent’s weight grows or shrinks and whether new names enter or exit the top tier. BlackRock publishes updated holdings files for MCHI on its iShares product page, typically refreshed daily, so investors can track any drift in that top-heavy concentration over time.
Over the next 12 months, the trajectory of U.S.-China trade negotiations will set the ceiling and floor for MCHI’s performance. Watch Tencent’s earnings and any MSCI rebalance that shifts its 16% weight, because that single holding has enough pull to move the fund independently of everything else happening in Beijing or Washington.
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