Is China Back?

By Peter Rosenstreich
Published on 17.05.2024

The Chinese stock market has been a subject of much debate, and it's essential to consider its investment potential. Many people view China's economy as chaotic due to geopolitical tensions and strict regulations. This has resulted in Chinese stocks being underrepresented in global portfolios, leading to differences in value compared to other markets. In 2024, China's equity markets experienced significant shifts. In January, Chinese stocks on the Shanghai and Shenzhen Stock Exchanges and Hong Kong and US-listed China ADRs dropped due to low investor positioning in China equities. As Hong Kong and Mainland China benchmarks reached key index levels, index futures were liquidated, leading to market declines. But conditions for appreciation have materialized. Since February, Chinese benchmarks have been up 15-20%.

Several factors have driven this strong rally.

The Chinese government is buying Mainland stocks to stabilize the domestic market and influence stock market indices. Unlike many developed markets, China does not have market circuit breakers to halt trading during periods of volatility. Therefore, government-related entities act as buyers of last resort. This time, China is being more public about its stock purchases.

International sentiment towards Chinese stocks has started to improve, with more investors turning positive and managers' underweight China positions showing signs of change. Investors' neutral or underweight positions influenced the decline in Chinese equities in January. US investors were the first to reduce their China positions due to trade tensions and regulatory issues. European investors followed suit after geopolitical uncertainty from Russia's invasion of Ukraine, while Asian and local Chinese investors divested from Mainland stocks later.
On April 12, The State Council issued "9 Key Points" to enhance China's capital markets, a rare move for China's top political body.

The measures include:

Controlling the supply of IPOs.
Promoting dividends and corporate governance improvements.
Encouraging bank and trust products to allocate more to equities.

Some investors have not recognized this despite attractive valuations in China equities. However, many companies, particularly in the internet sector, are addressing this by buying back their stock.

Several other positive developments are contributing to the strong performance of Chinese stocks this year:

China's macroeconomic data has surpassed expectations, with PMIs, GDP growth, and exports performing better than anticipated, indicating more resilient growth.

China has shifted away from restrictive policies towards a pro-growth and pro-markets stance, with significant monetary easing, rate cuts, and plans for shareholder-friendly reforms, as well as interventions in the market by China's sovereign wealth fund.

Despite negative headlines, a closer look at China's fundamentals reveals a remarkably resilient economy. It's showing accelerating corporate profits, decisive policy action, and tepid improvements in sentiment. The significant underweighting of Chinese stocks by investors this year, despite their strong performance, has likely impacted their overall performance. This underscores the importance of looking beyond the perception of the Chinese market and staying anchored in fundamentals rather than being swayed by headlines.

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