Five reasons to keep the faith in China
China A-shares are outperforming and rising wealth and living standards mean the country is moving rapidly to higher value goods and services.
Amid the coronavirus pandemic and oil price war, our A-share team urges investors to consider why China's stock market is outperforming right now.
The novel coronavirus pandemic is taking a heavy toll on the global economy and capital markets, creating uncertainty and causing widespread investor panic. At this point it’s worth taking stock of where we are now, and why investors should keep faith in the A-share market.
1. Better shape
China is now an old hand at managing crises. To all intents and purposes, it contained the COVID-19 outbreak in one province (Hubei), sparing huge populations in cities such as Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou and Shenzhen from the brunt of this pandemic. The Chinese leadership team’s response has been quick, decisive and effective, in contrast to hesitancy among governments elsewhere. It has left China in better shape than the rest of the world.
In addition, the People’s Bank of China has prioritised timely liquidity management over a major rate cut, using targeted measures such as tax breaks to support sectors under most strain. Its measured approach helps to explain the relative outperformance of MSCI China A Onshore Index, which has returned -13.35 per cent year to 23/03/2020 versus -30.43 per cent for the S&P500 and -35.05 per cent for MSCI Europe. The MSCI China A Onshore Index captures large and mid-cap representation across China securities listed on the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges. Moreover, amid the oil price war, it’s worth noting that the energy sector makes up just 1.5 per cent of MSCI China A Onshore. In other words, the A-share market is less oil-driven—and effectively less risky —than many major markets around the globe.
2. Return to work
Slowly but surely the Chinese are returning to work, even as nations elsewhere are shutting economic activity down and declaring states of emergency. In March, President Xi Jinping visited Wuhan in Hubei province—the epicentre of what was to become a global pandemic— to encourage migrant workers to return to work. Gradually authorities have lifted the lockdown in Hubei. With factories in China starting to resume production and migrant workers returning to their day jobs, freight logistics rates—indicating the movement of goods around the economy—are on the rise and people are consuming again. It underscores how the swiftness of Chinese leaders’ actions has enabled the nation to get back on its feet quickly.
3. Stimulus
China responded rapidly after Lunar New Year with an injection of liquidity into the banking system, which has helped to support market volumes and retail investor participation. More recently the People’s Bank of China has made credit more freely available by cutting the amount of cash that banks must set aside as reserves. It is a continuation of China’s targeted approach to stimulus. Investors can expect more fiscal and administrative measures to support the resumption of normal operations, including tax cuts and exemptions as well as low-cost loans. To date the PBoC has been less aggressive in its response than other global central banks, which have acted to steady markets but are running low on conventional monetary firepower. China, on the other hand, has yet to unleash the full power of its fiscal and monetary might. It retains dry powder.
4. Relatively insulated
As the needs of China’s population have evolved, so its policymakers have switched from prioritising economic growth at all costs via industrial manufacturing and exports to driving self-sufficient expansion through domestic consumption and services. The latter makes up more than 50 per cent of China’s GDP growth today. Its economy is being powered by urbanisation, an increasingly wealthy population and a huge domestic market. This is where investors can anticipate continued structural growth. The customers and supply chains of domestically orientated companies are largely based in China, so the bulk of their revenues and costs are renminbi-based. As such they are more reliant on internal than external demand, pointing to sustainability in earnings growth. It leaves them relatively insulated during downturns in global economic growth.
5. Premium consumption
Our long-term investment thesis remains unchanged. China today has the world’s second-largest economy. Rising wealth and living standards mean the country is moving rapidly to higher value goods and services. The key is identifying companies that can tap into these growing disposable incomes. China’s 380 million millennials are earning and spending more than their parents ever did. This increased spending power is driving demand for premium products ranging from electric appliances to cars and even high-end liquor. We also see structural demand for insurance and wealth planning. These are some of the things people demand as they get richer. In our view, investors should focus on the prospects for Chinese consumers, especially at the premium end.