Equities
Executive Summary China’s Business Cycle Has Not Bottomed Recent data showed a substantial improvement in the economy in the first two months of the year. However, the optimism is not well supported by other industry and high-frequency data. China’s exports were resilient, while infrastructure investment also rebounded sharply on the back of front-loaded fiscal stimulus. Nonetheless, domestic demand in China remains in the doldrums. Housing market indicators show a further deterioration in home sales and prices in January and February. Consumption in tourism during the Chinese New Year and service sector activities were also weaker compared with the same period last year. While we expect policymakers to roll out more measures to shore up domestic demand, China’s economy will likely have a choppy bottom in the first half of 2022. We maintain our neutral position on Chinese onshore stocks in a global portfolio. In absolute terms, we are cautious and are looking for a better price entry point in Q2. Bottom Line: Economic data in the first two months of the year sent mixed signals, which suggests that China’s economy has not reached a solid bottom. Feature Newly released economic data from January and February (i.e. industrial production, fixed-asset investment, retail sales and property investment) all generated sizable positive surprises. However, other industry and high-frequency data sent conflicting messages. The improvement in China’s total social financing (TSF) in the past few months has been due to local government (LG) bond issuance (Chart 1). Corporate credit showed little advancement, while household loans were extremely weak (Chart 2). In addition, further contracting home sales paint a bleak picture of housing demand. Soft readings in the service sector Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) and core consumer price index (CPI) suggest that consumption remains sluggish. Chart 1The Credit Impulse Continued To Trend Down (Excluding LG Bond Issuance) Chart 2No Improvement In Corporate Or Household Demand For Credit Beijing is stepping up its pro-growth stimulus, particularly on the fiscal front. However, the country will unlikely undergo a strong recovery in its business cycle without a major reversal in the housing market and an improvement in demand from the private sector. Moreover, recent lockdowns to tame surging domestic COVID-19 cases amid China’s zero-tolerance pose major downside risks to the near-term economic outlook. Chinese equities sold off in response to lockdown news despite the release of better economic data earlier this month, highlighting investors’ weak sentiment. Chart 3China's Business Cycle Has Not Bottomed We maintain our neutral view on China’s onshore stocks relative to their global peers, but we are cautious on Chinese equities in absolute terms. On a cyclical time horizon (6 to 12 months), there are increasing odds that Chinese policymakers will stimulate the economy more aggressively, particularly in the 2nd half of the year. However, it is too early to turn bullish on Chinese equities (Chart 3). The ongoing war in Ukraine and elevated oil prices, coupled with risks of further lockdowns in China and a prolonged downturn in domestic demand, present significant near-term risks to the performance of Chinese equities. Investors should closely watch for more reflationary efforts from Beijing and we believe a better entry point to upgrade Chinese stocks may emerge in Q2. Qingyun Xu, CFA Associate Editor qingyunx@bcaresearch.com Near-Term Outlook For The Housing Market Remains Bleak Real estate investment growth in January-February was surprisingly strong, according to data from China’s National Bureau of Statistics. However, headline growth in real estate investment deviates from the continued weaknesses in other housing market indicators (Chart 4). In addition, data on the production of some key construction materials showed little improvement (Chart 5). Chart 4Conflicting Signals From The January-February Housing Market Indicators Chart 5Data On Building Materials Also Deviate From Strong Investment Growth In Real Estate Demand for housing remains lackluster. February’s medium- to long-term household loan growth, which is mainly mortgage loans and is highly correlated with home sales, plunged to an all-time low (Chart 6). Meanwhile, the deep contraction in home sales growth continued in February, and sentiment among home buyers remains downbeat (Chart 6, bottom panel) Chart 6Demand For Housing Remains In The Doldrums Chart 7Policymakers Are Trying To Avoid Further Inflating The Housing Price Bubble Although authorities have reiterated that they want to stabilize the property market, the policy measures have been only fine-tuned. Regional governments have been allowed to initiate their own housing policies and some cities have eased processes for home purchases.1 However, given that maintaining stable home prices is an overarching goal and China’s leadership is trying to avoid further inflating the home price bubble, it is doubtful that the government will allow significant re-leveraging in the property market (Chart 7). Chart 8 shows that funds to real estate developers have slowed to the lowest level since 2010, which will further dampen housing construction. Chart 8Housing Construction Activities Will Weaken Further In 1H22 Chart 9The Latest Spike In Domestic COVID Cases Will Weigh On Home Sales Moreover, high-frequency floor space sold data shows a broad-based decline in housing sales in tier-one, two and three cities through mid-March (Chart 9). The latest spike in China’s domestic COVID-19 cases and regional lockdowns will likely weigh on home sales in the short term. Property investment and construction will remain at risk without a decisive rebound in home sales. A Disrupted Recovery In Household Consumption Both retail and online sales of consumer goods held up better than expected in January and February (Chart 10). However, the subdued underlying data highlight that the strong reading in retail sales in the first two months of the year may be less than meets the eye. Chart 10Although Growth In Retail Sales Rebounded In January-February... Chart 11...Service Sector Activities Still Struggle To Return To Pre-Pandemic Levels Service sector and passenger activities are still well below their pre-pandemic levels, two years after the first COVID lockdowns in early 2020 (Chart 11). Consumption in tourism during the Chinese New Year holiday was weaker than last year. Households’ propensity to spend also showed few signs of rebounding (Chart 12 & 13). Chart 12Travel Consumption Was Weak During The Chinese New Year Chart 13Households’ Propensity To Consume Continues To Trend Down Furthermore, both core and service CPI weakened in February, reflecting lackluster demand from consumers (Chart 14). Labor market dynamics have also worsened and the unemployment rate, particularly among young workers, has risen rapidly since the beginning of the year (Chart 15). Chart 14Weak Core And Service CPIs In February Suggest Lackluster Household Demand Chart 15Labor Market Situation Is Worsening The ongoing fight against mounting new COVID cases in China will likely drag down service sector activities in the coming months (Chart 16A & 16B). Importantly, the new round of lockdowns and mobility restrictions are primarily in busier and more developed coastal metropolitans, such as Shenzhen and Shanghai. Therefore, the negative impact from social activity restrictions will be more substantive compared with previous lockdowns. Chart 16AEscalating New Cases In China Will Constrain Domestic Consumption Chart 16BEscalating New Cases In China Will Constrain Domestic Consumption Strong Rebound In Manufacturing Investment Growth In January-February Probably Not Sustainable A strong rebound in the growth of manufacturing investment helped to support overall fixed-asset investment in the first two months of the year (Chart 17). Robust external demand for China’s manufacturing goods has likely contributed to the pickup in manufacturing output and helped to sustain Chinese manufacturers’ near-maximum capacity (Chart 18). Chart 17Strong Pickup In Manufacturing Investment Growth Chart 18Robust Exports Support Chinese Manufacturing Output And Capacity Utilization While the volume of manufacturing output increased, prices that producers charge consumers have rolled over (Chart 19). Historically, prices have been more important in driving corporate profits than the volume of output. In addition, a strong RMB and sharply climbing shipping costs will also weigh on Chinese exporters’ profitability (Chart 20). Chart 19Manufacturing Output Picked Up While Prices Rolled Over Chart 20Strong RMB And Rising Shipping Costs Will Reduce Chinese Exporters' Profitability Chart 21Manufacturing Sector's Profit Margins Will Be Further Squeezed The elevated prices of oil and global industrial metals will continue to disproportionally benefit upstream industries, which are mainly composed of commodity producers. Meanwhile, the manufacturing sector’s profit margins will be squeezed by rising input costs and sluggish final demand (Chart 21). Chinese manufacturers’ profit growth will likely weaken through 1H22 and the downtrend may be exacerbated by the ongoing struggle to contain COVID cases. The impact from recent lockdowns in the northern city of Jilin (an auto production center), Shenzhen (a high-tech manufacturing production and export hub), and Shanghai (a city with major ports and a key logistics provider) will disrupt China’s manufacturing production and curb investment in the near term. Infrastructure Sector Will Remain A Bright Spot Through 1H22 Related Report China Investment StrategyAiming High, Lying Low Infrastructure investment staged a strong recovery in January-February on the back of front-loaded fiscal stimulus (Chart 22). LG bond issuance started to accelerate last November and will boost both traditional and new-economy infrastructure spending at least through 1H22. Our calculations suggest that fiscal thrust will rise to more than 2% of GDP this year, a sharp reversal from last year’s negative impulse of 2% (Chart 23). Chart 22Fiscal Stimulus Is At Work Chart 23Fiscal Thrust In 2022 Could Reach More Than 2% Of GDP Chart 24Subdued Shadow Bank Activities Will Limit The Magnitude Of Rebound In Infrastructure Investment However, shadow bank activity, which historically had a tight correlation with infrastructure investment, remains downbeat (Chart 24). February’s reading of shadow bank credit was extremely weak, highlighting that local governments still face constraints in off-balance sheet leveraging through local government financing vehicles (LGFVs). The trend in shadow bank loans bears close attention in the coming months because it will signal whether the central government will allow more backdoor financing to help local governments fund their infrastructure projects. A continued soft reading in shadow bank activities will likely limit the upside in infrastructure investment growth. Table 1China Macro Data Summary Table 2China Financial Market Performance Summary Footnotes 1 Guangzhou lowered its down-payment ratio from 30% to 20%, along with a 20bp cut in mortgage rates. Zhengzhou marginally relaxed home purchase restrictions by allowing families who bring elderly relatives to live in the city to buy one extra home and also lifted the “definition of second home ownership by physical unit & mortgage history”. Strategic Themes Cyclical Recommendations
US Homebuilder stocks have had a poor start to the year. They are down 26% since the beginning of 2022 and are underperforming the S&P 500 by 22%. The sharp increase in interest rates over this period explains why homebuilders have performed so badly.…
Executive Summary Expansion In European Defense European yields have significant upside on a structural basis. European government spending will remain generous, which will boost domestic demand; meanwhile, lower global excess savings will lift the neutral rate of interest and structurally higher inflation will boost term premia. A short-term pullback in yields is nonetheless likely; however, it will not short-circuit the trend toward higher yields on a long-term basis. CYCLICAL INCEPTION DATE RETURN SINCE INCEPTION (%) COMMENT EQUITIES Favor European Aerospace & Defense Over European Benchmark 3/28/2022 Favor European Aerospace & Defense Over Other Industrials 3/28/2022 Bottom Line: Investors should maintain a below-benchmark duration in their European fixed-income portfolios. Higher yields driven by robust domestic demand and strong capex also boost the appeal of industrial, materials, and financials sectors. Aerospace and defense stocks are particularly appealing. The economic impact of the war in Ukraine continues to drive the day-to-day fluctuations of the market; however, investors cannot ignore the long-term trends in the economy and markets. The direction of bond yields over the coming years is paramount among those questions. Does the recent rise in yields only reflect the current inflationary shock caused by both supply-chain impairments and commodity inflation—that is, is it finite? Or does that rise mirror structural forces and therefore have much further to run? We lean toward yields having more upside over the coming years, propelled higher by structural forces. As a result, we continue to recommend investors structurally overweight sectors that benefit from a rising yield environment, such as financials and industrials, while also favoring value over growth stocks. The defense sector is particularly attractive. Three Structural Forces Behind Higher Yields The current supply-chain disruptions and inflation crises have played a critical role in lifting European yields. However, a broader set of factors underpins our bearish bond view—namely, the lack of fiscal discipline accentuated by the consequences of the Ukrainian war, the likely move higher in the neutral rate of interest generated by lower savings, and the long-term uptrend in inflation. Profligate Governments Chart 1 Larger government deficits will contribute to higher European yields. Europe is not as fiscally conservative as it was before the COVID-19 crisis. Establishment politicians must fend off pressures caused by voters attracted to populist parties willing to spend more. Consequently, IMF estimates published prior to the Ukrainian war already tabulated that, for the next five years, Europe’s average structurally-adjusted budget deficit would be 2.4% of GDP wider than it was last decade (Chart 1). Chart 2Expanding Military Spending The Ukrainian crisis is also prompting a fiscal response that will last many years. Europe does not want to stand still in the face of the Russian threat. Today, Western Europe’s military spending amounts to 1.5% of GDP, or €170 billion. This is below NATO’s threshold of 2% of GDP. Rebuilding military capacity will take large investments. Thus, European nations are likely to move toward that target and even go beyond. Conservatively, if we assume that military spending hits 2% of GDP by the end of the decade, it will rise above €300 billion (Chart 2). Weaning Europe off Russian energy will also prevent a significant fiscal retrenchment. This effort will take two dimensions. The first initiative will be to build infrastructures to receive more LNG from the rest of the world to limit Russian intake. Constructing regasification and storage facilities as well as re-directing pipeline networks be costly and require additional CAPEX over the coming years. The second initiative will be to double-up on green initiatives to decrease the need for fossil fuel. The NGEU funds are already tackling this strategic goal. Nonetheless, the more than €100 billion reserved for renewable energy and energy preservation initiatives was only designed to kick-start hitting the EU’s CO2 emission target for 2050. Accelerating this process not only helps cutting the dependence on Russian energy, but it is also popular with voters. The path of least resistance is to invest in that sphere and to increase such investment beyond the current sums from the NGEU program. The last fiscal push is likely to be more temporary. The UN estimates that four million refugees have left Ukraine, with the vast majority settling in the EU. Accommodating that many individuals will be costly and will add to government spending across the region. Even if mostly transitory, this spending will have an important impact on activity. Larger fiscal deficits push yields higher for two reasons. Greater sovereign issuance that does not reflect a negative shock to the private sector will need to offer higher rates of returns to attract investors. Moreover, greater government spending will boost aggregate demand, which increases money demand. As a result, the price of money will be higher than otherwise, which means that interest rates will rise—as will yields. Decreasing Global Excess Savings Decreasing global excess savings will put upward pressure on the global neutral rate of interest, a phenomenon Peter Berezin recently discussed in BCA’s Global Investment Strategy service. This process will be visible in Europe as well. The US will play an important role in the process of lifting global neutral rates because the dollar remains the foundation of the global financial system. Compared to last decade, the main drag on US savings is that household deleveraging is over. As households decreased their debt load following the global financial crisis, a large absorber of global savings vanished, putting downward pressure on the price of those savings. Today, US households enjoy strong net worth equal to 620% of GDP and have resumed accumulating debt (Chart 3). Consequently, the downward trend in US total private nonfinancial debt loads has ended. The US capex cycle is likely to experience a boost as well. As Peter highlighted, the US capital stock is ageing (Chart 4). Moreover, the past five years have witnessed three events that underscore the fragility of global supply-chains: a disruptive Sino-US trade war, a pandemic, and now a military conflict. This realization is causing firms to move from a “just-in-time” approach to managing supply-chains to a “just-in-case” one. The process of building redundancies and localized supply chains will add to capex for many years, pushing up ex-ante investments relative to savings, and thus, interest rates. Chart 3US Households Are Done Deleveraging Chart 4An Ageing US Capital Stock China’s current account surplus is also likely to decline. For the past two decades, China has been one of the largest providers of savings to the global economy. This is a result of an annual current account surplus that first averaged $150 billion per year from 2000 to 2010 and then $180 billion from 2010 to 2020, and now stands at $316 billion. Looking ahead, China wants to use fiscal policy more aggressively to support demand, which often boosts imports without increasing exports. Also, more domestically-oriented supply chains around the world will limit the growth of Chinese exports. This combination will compress Chinese excess savings, which will place upward pressure on the global neutral rate of interest. Europe is not immune to declining savings. Over the past ten years, the Euro Area current account surplus has averaged €253 billion. Germany’s current account surplus stood at 7.4% of GDP before the pandemic. Those excess savings depressed global rates in general and European ones especially (Chart 5). As in the US, Europe’s capital stock is ageing and needs some upgrade (Chart 6). Moreover, greater government spending boosts aggregate demand. Because investment is a form of derived demand, stronger overall spending promotes capex to a greater extent. Thus, Europe’s public infrastructure push will lift private capex and curtail regional excess savings beyond the original drag from wider fiscal deficits. Additionally, the European population is getting older and will have to tap into their excess savings as they retire. This process will further diminish Europe’s current account surplus, that is, its excess savings. Chart 5Excess Savings Cap Relative Yields Chart 6An Ageing European Capital Stock Too Structurally Higher Inflation BCA believes that the current inflation surge is temporary and mostly reflects a mismatch between demand and supply. However, we also anticipate that, once this inflation climax dissipates, inflation will settle at a level higher than that prior to COVID-19 and will trend higher for the remainder of this decade. Labor markets will tighten going forward because policy rates remain well below neutral interest rates. Output gaps will close because of robust government spending and capex. This will keep wage growth elevated in the US and reanimate moribund salary gains in the Eurozone (Chart 7). This process, especially when combined with less efficient global supply chains and lower excess savings (which may also be thought of as deficient demand), will maintain inflation at a higher level than in the past two decades. Higher inflation will lift yields for two main reasons. First, investors will require both greater long-term inflation compensation and higher policy rates than in the past. Second, higher inflation often generates greater economic volatility and policy uncertainty, which means that today’s minimal term premia will increase over time (Chart 8). Together, these forces will create a lasting upward drift in yields. Chart 7European Wages Will Eventually Revive Chart 8Term Premia Won't Stay This Low Bottom Line: European yields will sport a structural uptrend for the remainder of the decade. Three forces support this assertion. First, European government spending will remain generous, supported by infrastructure and military spending. Second, global excess savings will recede as US consumer deleveraging ends, global capex rises, and the Chinese current account surplus narrows. Europe will mimic this process in response to an ageing population, greater government spending, and capex. Finally, inflation is on a structural uptrend, which will warrant higher term premia across the world. Not A Riskless View There are two main risks to this view, one in the near-term and one more structural. The near-term risk is the most pertinent for investors right now. Global yields may have embarked on a structural upward path, but a temporary pullback is becoming likely. As Chart 9 highlights, the expected twelve-month change in the US policy rate is at the upper limit of its range of the past three decades. Historically, when the discounter attains such a lofty level, a retrenchment in Treasury yields ensues, since investors have already discounted a significant degree of tightening. The same is true in Europe, where the ECB discounter is also consistent with a temporary pullback in German 10-year yields (Chart 10). Chart 9Discounters Point To A Treasury Rally... Chart 10... And A Bund Rally Chart 11A Mixed Message Investor positioning confirms the increasing tactical odds of a yield correction. The BCA Composite Technical Indicator for bonds is massively oversold, which often anticipates a bond rally (Chart 11). This echoes the signals from the JP Morgan surveys that highlight the very low portfolio duration of the bank’s clients. However, the BCA Bond Valuation Index suggests that bonds remain expensive. Together, these divergent messages point toward a temporary bond rally, not a permanent one. The longer-term risk is regularly highlighted by Dhaval Joshi in BCA’s Counterpoint service. Dhaval often shows that the stock of global real estate assets has hit $300 trillion or 330% of global GDP. Real estate is a highly levered asset class and global cap rates have collapsed with global bond yields. With little valuation cushion, real estate prices could become very vulnerable to higher yields. Nevertheless, real estate is also a real asset that produces an inflation hedge. Moreover, rental income follows global household income, and stronger aggregate demand will likely lift median household income especially in an environment in which globalization has reached its apex and populism remains a constant threat. Bottom Line: Global investor positioning has become stretched; therefore, a near-term pullback in yield is very likely, especially as central bank expectations have become aggressive. Nonetheless, a bond rally is unlikely to be durable in an environment in which bonds are expensive and in which growth and inflation will remain more robust than they were last decade. A greater long-term risk stems from expensive global real estate markets. However, real estate is sensitive to global economic activity and inflation, which should allow this asset class ultimately to weather higher yields. Investment Conclusions An environment in which yields rise will inflict additional damage on global bond portfolios. This is especially true in inflation-adjusted terms, since real yields stand at a paltry -0.76% in the US and -2.5% in Germany. Hence, we continue to recommend investors maintain a structural below-benchmark duration bias in their portfolios. Nonetheless, investors with enough flexibility in their investment mandate should take advantage of the expected near-term pullback in yields. Those without this flexibility should use the pullback as an opportunity to shorten their portfolio duration. Higher yields will also prevent strong multiple expansion from taking place; hence, the broad stock market will also offer paltry long-term real returns. Another implication of rising yields, especially if they reflect stronger growth and rising neutral interest rates, is to underweight growth stocks relative to value stocks (Chart 12). Growth stocks are expensive and very vulnerable to the pull on discount rates that follows rising risk-free rates. Meanwhile, stronger economic activity driven by infrastructure spending and capex will help the bottom line of industrial and material firms. Financials will also benefit. Higher yields help this sector and robust capex also boosts loan growth, which will generate a significant tailwind for banking revenues. Hence, rising yields will boost the attractiveness of banks, especially after they have become significantly cheaper because of the Ukrainian war (Chart 13). Chart 12Favor Value Over Growth Chart 13Bank Remain Attractive Related Report European Investment StrategyFallout From Ukraine Finally, four weeks ago, we highlighted that defense stocks were particularly appealing in today’s context. The re-armament of Europe in response to secular tensions with Russia is an obvious tailwind for this sector. However, it is not the only one. A long-term theme of BCA’s Geopolitical Strategy service is the expanding multipolarity of the world. The end of an era dominated by a single hegemon (the US) causes a rise in geopolitical instability and tensions. The resulting increase in conflict will invite a pickup in global military spending. Chart 14Defense Will Outshine The Rest European defense and aerospace stocks are expensive, with a forward P/E ratio approaching the top-end of their range relative to the broad market and other industrials. However, their relative earnings are also depressed following the collapse in airplane sales caused by the pandemic. Our bet on the sector is that its earnings will outperform the broad market as well as other industrials because of the global trend toward military buildup. As relative earnings recover their pandemic-induced swoon, so will relative equity prices (Chart 14). Bottom Line: Higher yields warrant a structural below-benchmark duration in European fixed-income portfolios, even if a near-term yield pullback is likely. As a corollary, value stocks will outperform growth stocks while industrials, materials, and financials will also beat a broad market whose long-term real returns will be poor. Within the industrial complex, aerospace and defense equities are particularly appealing because a global military buildup will boost their earnings prospects durably. Mathieu Savary, Chief European Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com Tactical Recommendations Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Trades
By mid-last week, the Hang Seng Tech index had gained 37% over six trading days amid investor optimism of receding regulatory risk. However, the rally appeared to fizzle towards the end of the week. A statement on Thursday from the US Public Company…
The economic expansion is in a more advanced stage in the US than it is in the Eurozone. US GDP recovered to its Q4 2019 pre-Covid level in the second quarter of 2021, and by the fourth quarter it was 3.2% above where it was prior to the pandemic. The Euro…
Earlier this week we highlighted that both the Richmond Fed and Philly Fed surveys jumped in March, which suggests that manufacturing activity firmed this month. On Thursday, the Kansas City Fed’s Manufacturing survey also surprised to the upside with the…
BCA Research’s Emerging Market Strategy service recommends overweighting Chinese A-shares within an EM equity universe. The risk-reward profile for the A-share market has improved because of the following: Authorities care much more about the…
Executive Summary EM Equity Sentiment Is Not Very Depressed Yet Chinese A-shares have become oversold, and authorities are determined to stabilize the market. Yet, downshifting corporate profits and a selloff in global stocks are risks to A-shares’ absolute performance. Overall, we favor A-shares relative to overall EM and Chinese investable stocks, but not in absolute terms. As to China’s internet companies, even though authorities have recently promised not to introduce new regulatory measures against platform companies, the already-enacted regulations will not be reversed, and common prosperity initiatives will continue to be rolled over in the coming months and years. Nevertheless, in response to their massive underperformance, we are upgrading Chinese investable stocks from underweight to neutral within an EM equity portfolio. Investors should stay defensive on global risk assets and continue underweighting EM equities and credit. Recommendation Inception Date Return Take Profits on Short Chinese Investable Value Stocks / Long Global Value Stocks Nov 26/20 39% Maintain Long Chinese A-Shares / Short Chinese Investable Stocks Mar 04/21 23.2% A New Trade: Long Chinese A-Shares / Short EM Stocks Mar 23/22 Upgrade Chinese Investable Stocks with EM from Underweight to Neutral Mar 23/22 Bottom Line: The risk-reward profile for Chinese stocks has improved, but does not yet justify a long position in absolute terms. The outlook for A-shares is superior to that of investable TMT and non-TMT stocks. Feature Table 1The Decline In Chinese Stocks From Their Peaks In 2021 To March 22, 2022 The last two weeks have seen massive gyrations in Chinese stocks, especially in the realm of internet companies. Chinese investable internet stocks’ year-long decline went into a tailspin early this month. But, in the last several days these stocks have rebounded sharply. The selloff earlier this year was not limited to internet companies. Chinese investable non-TMT and A-shares have also tanked. Table 1 illustrates the extent to which individual Chinese equity indexes are down from their peaks in 2021 to March 22. Chart 1Our China Relative Equity Trades The relevant question for investors is whether the events of the last several weeks represent a final capitulation in Chinese stocks, creating a buying opportunity, or at least marking an end to the underperformance of Chinese stocks versus global and EM equities. It is hard to know if an ultimate buying opportunity has emerged for Chinese stocks in absolute terms. Unless global stocks have bottomed (which is not our view, see more on this below), it will be difficult for Chinese share prices to rally on a sustainable basis. However, last week was probably a watershed event, at least for some parts of the Chinese equity markets. Thus, we are making several adjustments to our investment strategy for Chinese stocks: 1. Book profits on the short Chinese investable value stocks / long global value stocks position (Chart 1, top panel). This strategy has produced a 39% gain since its recommendation on March 4, 2021. 2. Maintain the long A-shares / short investable stocks strategy recommended on March 4, 2021 (Chart 1, bottom panel). 3. A new trade: long Chinese A-shares (onshore market) / short EM stocks. Consistently, we continue to recommend overweighting Chinese A-shares within an EM equity universe. 4. For EM equity portfolios, upgrade the allocation to the Chinese investable/offshore stock index from underweight to neutral. Chinese A-Shares (Onshore Market) The risk-reward profile for the A-share market has improved because of the following: Authorities care much more about the stability of the onshore equity market, which is dominated by domestic retail and institutional investors, than about offshore listed Chinese stocks, owned primarily by international investors. Securing onshore financial market stability is one of the main objectives of government policy this year. With the A-share price index down by 27% from its peak last year, authorities will deploy all the tools at their disposal to put a floor under share prices, including purchases by the National Team, which is a group of state-linked institutions that buy stocks to preclude larger drawdowns. Foreign investor net purchases of onshore listed stocks have become deeply negative (Chart 2, top panel). Historically, such large foreign liquidation of onshore stocks marked a bottom in A-shares (Chart 2, bottom panel). A-shares have become modestly cheap, as is evidenced by our composite valuation indicator and cyclically adjusted P/E ratio (Chart 3). Chart 2Chinese A-Shares Are Oversold Chart 3Chinese A-Shares: Improved Valuation Chart 4China: Fiscal Stimulus Is At Work Importantly, the government will ramp up stimulus and the economy will recover in H2 this year. The top panel of Chart 4 demonstrates that this year the fiscal spending impulse will rise from 1% to 3.4% of GDP Special bond issuance by local governments has already accelerated in recent months and will produce a revival in traditional infrastructure spending (Chart 4, bottom panel). Finally, onshore stocks are immune to the derating of offshore Chinese stocks due to international investor concerns about potential US sanctions and delisting from US markets. The reason is that foreign investors account for a very small share of onshore stock holdings. That said, China’s property market and COVID-19 lockdowns remain a risk to the economy and corporate profits. In fact, the improvement in the TSF impulse over the past several months has been solely due to local government (LG) bond issuance. Excluding LG bond issuance, the TSF impulse has not bottomed yet (Chart 5). This means that corporate and household credit origination have been weakening. Without a major reversal in corporate credit and the property market, a strong business cycle recovery is unlikely in China. Chart 5China: Corporate And Household Credit Has Not Improved Bottom Line: On the positive side, A-shares have become oversold, and authorities are determined to stabilize the market. On the negative side, downshifting corporate profits and a selloff in global stocks are risks to A-shares’ absolute performance. Overall, we favor A-shares in relative terms but not in absolute terms. Also, we reiterate the long A- shares / short Chinese investable stocks position initiated on March 4, 2021. A New Trade: Long Chinese A-Shares / Short EM Stocks A-share prices are set to outperform EM stocks in the coming months for the following reasons: First, domestic policy support is forthcoming for Chinese onshore stocks. Fiscal injections and an eventual improvement in credit origination will provide support to Chinese domestic demand in the second half of this year. By contrast, domestic demand in mainstream EM (excluding China, Korea, Taiwan) will remain lackluster and there will be little policy support. Latin American and EMEA countries have raised interest rates substantially and could hike them further due to surging energy and food prices. High borrowing costs will dampen their domestic demand (Chart 6). In ASEAN countries where central banks have not yet tightened policy, real interest rates remain relatively high. Also, we tactically downgraded Indian stocks to underweight last week due to potential economic growth and profit disappointments amid high energy prices and expensive equity valuations. As a whole, mainstream EM broad money growth – both in nominal and real terms – are close to record lows and will drop further (Chart 7). Chart 6Mainstream EM Domestic Demand To Weaken Chart 7Mainstream EM Broad Money Growth Chart 8Mainstream EM: The Fiscal Thrust Is Mildly Negative The fiscal thrust for mainstream EM in 2022 will be marginally negative (Chart 8). Second, at the current juncture, rising US bond yields constitute a greater risk to mainstream EM currencies and equities than to Chinese ones. The renminbi has been firm versus the US dollar, which has been appreciating over the past 15 months. This is due to China’s enormous current account surplus and lack of capital outflows. Chinese individuals and companies are reluctant to invest abroad due to fears of US sanctions amid long-term geopolitical tensions between the US and China. Meanwhile, rising US interest rates pose risks to mainstream EM currencies (Chart 9). The basis is that these mainstream EM countries still meaningfully rely on international investors (though less than in the past). The Fed’s hawkish stance and rising US interest rates will continue supporting the greenback in the near term. Finally, the relative trend in bond yields favors Chinese onshore stocks versus the EM equity benchmark. Chinese local government bond yields have decoupled from US Treasury yields. Yet, mainstream EM domestic yields are rising along with those of the US (Chart 10). Chart 9US Dollar vs. EM And US TIPS Yields Chart 10Mainstream EM Local Yields Are Rising Rapidly Chart 11Rising Borrowing Costs Are Negative For Share Prices Falling interest rates in China will support onshore equity valuations. By contrast, rising EM local bond yields as well as EM USD corporate bond yields will suppress equity performance in mainstream EM (Chart 11). Bottom Line: We remain overweight Chinese A-shares within an EM universe. Our confidence level in this strategy has increased and, hence, we recommend a new pair trade: long Chinese A-shares / short EM equities. Investable Stocks: TMT And Non-TMT Even though authorities have recently promised not to introduce new regulatory measures against platform companies, the already-enacted regulations will not be reversed, and common prosperity initiatives will continue to be rolled out in the coming months and years. Hence, the derating/multiple compression of TMT stocks might not be over for the same reasons we have been arguing for some time: These companies are facing higher uncertainty about their business model, which entails a higher equity risk premium. Government regulation of corporate profitability like those of monopolies and oligopolies entails low equity multiples. In the government’s view, these companies should perform social duties – redistributing profits from shareholders to Chinese citizens. Beijing’s involvement in their management and the prioritization of national and geopolitical objectives over shareholder interests. Risks of delisting from US stock exchanges remain high despite some recent statements from Chinese authorities. The point is that in the long run, Chinese authorities will not accept foreign/US shareholder control of Chinese platform companies that own and manage big data. Chart 12Chinese TMT Stocks: Where Is The Technical Support? It is impossible to know at what level of share prices these risks will be properly discounted or over-discounted so a new bull market can start. When valuation indicators are not useful, we resort to technical indicators. Based on our technical work, a bear market might stop at one of very long-term moving averages. Accordingly, Chinese TMT stocks might have reached a bottom (Chart 12). As to Chinese investable non-TMT share prices (analogous to value stocks), these have fallen close to their lows of the past 12 years (Chart 13, top panel). They have also massively underperformed global and EM peers (non-TMT/value stocks) (Chart 13, middle and bottom panel). Given the potential for a revival in the Chinese economy in H2 this year, investors should avoid the temptation to become more bearish on Chinese non-TMT/value stocks as their prices fall. Their risk-reward in relative terms to other markets has improved due to the capitulation selloff, and authorities’ increased willingness to stimulate the economy more aggressively going forward. Bottom Line: The year-long bear market in Chinese investable TMT and non-TMT stocks is probably in its late innings in absolute terms. In response to their massive underperformance, we are upgrading Chinese investable stocks from underweight to neutral within an EM equity portfolio. Also, we are taking profits on our recommended position of short Chinese value stocks / long global value stocks. Overall Market Observations The selloff in global and EM equities is not over. As we argued in our March 10 report, global stocks will set a durable bottom only if oil prices drop on a sustainable basis and if the Fed backs off from tightening/US bond yields drop. Neither of these conditions have been met so far. In addition, the Ukraine crisis will intensify. Hence, the path of least resistance for global share prices is lower. The current geopolitical and macro backdrops are similar to the ones that prevailed during the Cuban missile crisis in 1962, the oil embargo of 1973 in response to the Yom Kippur War as well as the Gulf War of 1990. Based on the above three profiles, the current selloff in US stocks is not yet over (Chart 14). Chart 13Chinese Non-TMT Stocks: A Lot Of Bad News Being Discounted? Chart 14US Equity Drawdowns During Geopolitical Crises/Commodity Shocks Importantly, rapidly rising US high-yield corporate ex-energy bond yields (shown inverted in the chart) are a precursor for lower US share prices (Chart 15). All this means that non-US equities, including EM, will continue to suffer. In a nutshell, investors’ sentiment on EM equities is not very bearish to warrant a bullish stance from a contrarian perceptive (Chart 16). Chart 15Rising US Corporate Bond Yields Is A Problem For The S&P 500 Chart 16EM Equity Sentiment Is Not Very Depressed Yet Bottom Line: Investors should stay defensive on global risk assets and continue underweighting EM equities and credit in global equity and credit portfolios, respectively. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes