Warming up to the potential of China’s equities

By: BlackRock
Harvest Exchange
February 23, 2017

Warming up to the potential of China’s equities

Powerful structural and cyclical forces make China’s equities attractive to investors. The key reasons? Global reflation and a domestic cyclical upswing should be supportive. See the <html><body><u>BlackRock GPS</u></body></html> for China. Progress on domestic structural reforms and undemanding valuations add to China’s attractiveness.

An increasing debt load, persistent capital outflows and a potential trade war with the U.S. under the new Trump administration have made investors wary of China. Yet trade is a smaller growth driver than in the past, and China is strengthening ties within Asia and making its economy more consumer-driven.

Performance conundrum

Chinese equity returns have trailed the nation’s spectacular growth since 2000, underperforming emerging markets such as India. Structural problems (resulting from the 2009 stimulus) and declining multiples have weighed on equity returns since the financial crisis.

Companies have enjoyed solid earnings growth, but high levels of investment have left little to distribute to shareholders. China H-shares—listed on foreign exchanges such as Hong Kong—have fared better than A-shares—listed on onshore exchanges. See the chart below.

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These dynamics should change as policymakers in Beijing press ahead with reforms, domestic and offshore valuations converge, and China is admitted to global equity indexes.

“Old economy” sectors such as materials, industrials and financials are still overrepresented in the domestic A-share market, but “new economy” companies in consumption-driven sectors such as technology and services accounted for half of the IPOs in the A-share market in 2016, we calculate.

The eventual inclusion of domestic A-shares in indexes should expand the representation of China in global capital markets and attract a broader group of investors. China’s onshore and offshore markets are set to converge, attracting a more stable and less speculative investor base. This begs the question: Are Chinese equities investible? And where are the greatest opportunities today?

It may be tempting for investors to focus exclusively on “new economy” stocks given the high indebtedness and mature growth rates of some industrial and manufacturing companies. Yet we also see opportunities as the programs to reduce capacity and improve profitability in overbuilt heavy industries such as steel and coal are broadened to other industries over the coming years.