(Bloomberg) -- Chinese tech giants led shares of Asian peers lower after hawkish comments from the Federal Reserve stoked concerns for the rate-sensitive sector.

The Hang Seng Tech Index slid 3.2%, with Tencent Holdings Ltd. and Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. each falling at least 2% in Hong Kong. The shares tracked losses in the Nasdaq 100 overnight as Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s testimony before Congress dented risk appetite.

Powell said the central bank is likely to lift interest rates higher and potentially faster than previously expected. Some market watchers are now expecting a 50 basis-point interest rate hike during the Fed’s policy meeting later this month.

“Maybe macro concerns take the spotlight now, like geopolitics and the Fed, but over time investors cannot ignore the earnings,” said Vey-Sern Ling, managing director at Union Bancaire Privee. Most tech companies are beating analyst estimates and giving positive outlooks, he said.

Elsewhere, the region’s big chipmakers were also weak on Powell’s comments, with South Korea’s Samsung Electronics Co. and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. all down. Japanese tech stocks were supported by a weaker yen, though Alibaba investor SoftBank Group Corp. slipped 0.7%.

A stellar rally in Chinese tech stocks in the three months through January petered out as growth concerns outweighed earnings beats by Alibaba and others. The Hang Seng tech gauge has slumped 17% from its recent peak, reflecting caution after outsized gains fueled by hopes for reopening.

The selloff Wednesday also comes as China holds its National People’s Congress, a key focus of which is Beijing’s tech trade spat with the US. In other upcoming events for the sector, JD.com Inc. is due to report results Thursday and Tencent on March 22.

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