A block trade is, in mechanical terms, the simplest of capital markets transactions: a large position changes hands between identified buyer and seller, off-screen, at a negotiated price, with the cross reported to HKEX in accordance with applicable rules.
The economic premise is that working a large position through the open market over weeks or months — the alternative — will erode the price in proportion to the position’s size relative to free float and average daily volume. The block trade is the discreet alternative.
What separates a successful block from an expensive one is rarely the legal mechanics, which are well-trodden. It is the discipline around three variables: pricing, timing, and disclosure. Each is a domain where small errors compound rapidly.
Pricing in a block is negotiated, but the anchor is the screen. The discount-to-screen (or, less commonly, premium) is informed by the position’s size, the liquidity profile of the underlying, the depth of demand, and the seller’s urgency. Discounts in the low single digits are routine for positions that can be absorbed by a single high-quality buyer with limited onward-trading needs; mid-single-digit discounts are common where the position requires multiple buyers or where the underlying carries event risk. Discounts in the high single digits and above typically signal either a position-size issue or a seller-urgency issue, and merit attention.
Timing is more subtle and more consequential. Block trades have an unwritten preference for the late-in-the-day window, when intraday signal has been priced and the cross is least likely to disturb the next session’s open. Where the seller is a director or substantial shareholder, the timing also intersects with prohibited periods around results announcements, dividend declarations, and similar issuer events. The window of execution can be narrow; pre-positioning the structure is what preserves it.
Disclosure is the third variable, and the one most often handled poorly. The on-exchange reporting of a block cross is automatic and unavoidable; what is manageable is the sequencing and the language. Where the seller crosses an SFO Part XV threshold downward, or the buyer crosses one upward, the timing of the regulatory disclosure relative to the cross must be planned. Where the transaction touches Takeovers Code concentration thresholds, the analysis becomes more involved.
Beneath these three variables sits the network. The block trades that move smoothly are the ones where the arranger has long-standing relationships with a curated set of institutional and strategic buyers — the kind that absorb size without secondary signalling — and where the seller is matched to the right buyer before pricing is committed. Speed in a block is a function of preparation; the trade that executes inside a single day was prepared over weeks.
For the seller — controlling shareholder, family office, pre-IPO investor at maturity, or corporate selling a strategic holding — the block trade is a precision instrument. The discipline is what makes the precision possible.
Edward Chan Wai-Lun, Founder & Managing Principal