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By  Wenli Zheng
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China’s policy pivot marks a turning point in the economic cycle

A policy pivot from risk control to growth support suggests a more favorable environment for growth and business.

December 2024, From the Field -

Key Insights
  • The September Politburo meeting signaled a policy pivot from risk control to growth support. We expect a more favorable environment for growth and business.
  • Immediate policy focus is on property and local government debt to stabilize the economy. Over the medium term, consumption and industrial upgrades hold the key.
  • We see compelling opportunities in high‑quality growth businesses, technology/industrial companies in an upcycle, and companies with rising shareholder returns.

Decisive policy shift from controlling risk to supporting growth

In our view, the Politburo meeting on September 26 signaled a clear change with respect to China’s policy priorities. Since 2021, financial deleveraging and austerity were the primary agenda. However, facing weakening demand and a slowing economy, there is now a clear sense of urgency to support growth. We think a policy turning point was reached with the Politburo’s strong rhetoric about the economy, the call to reverse the property sector decline, and the flurry of expansionary policies that followed.

The first set of announcements from the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) and other financial regulators were centered on monetary policy easing, including interest rate cuts, a reduction in the required reserve ratio for banks, lowering the cost for existing mortgages, and targeted support for the equity market. Subsequently, the Ministry of Finance came out with announcements regarding fiscal support, with the initial priorities being local government debt, property destocking, and increased spending on the safety net for low‑income groups.

The market is currently laser‑focused on the specific size of the fiscal budget. We believe the directional change is what matters. With the strong commitment to support growth, we may now have the “policy put” in place. More support is likely to come if the initial phases prove to be insufficient. In addition, with the clear message from Beijing, the local governments’ mentality will shift. This will create a more favorable policy environment at the local and execution levels.

Current financial deleveraging cycle enters late innings

China’s economic recovery since the COVID reopening has disappointed. While there are structural challenges, we believe that the deleveraging cycle since 2021 was the dominant factor accounting for the weakness. The agenda was to address the overinvestment and overpricing in the property sector. From the peak in 2020, the price of secondary homes declined 30%, primary sales volume more than halved, and new housing starts declined by over 70%. The negative impact on the Chinese economy was significant, though the worst might be behind us. With China’s property investment as share of total investment normalizing to around 9% to 10% (around the average for developed market economies), the industry is now on a more sustainable footing than it was three or four years ago (Figure 1).

(Fig. 1) Property sales volume back to 15 years ago

Property sales volume back to 15 years ago

As of August 31, 2024.
There is no guarantee that any forecast made will come to pass.
Source: Citi Research.
GFA = gross floor area.

China’s property slump resulted in the deterioration of another ongoing chronic problem—local government debt. Land finance was close to 40% of local government revenues in 2020. However, this revenue source has since declined by over 40%. The result of this is a declining willingness by local government to invest, an austerity mentality taking hold, and a less friendly business environment.

To better understand the current trajectory, it would be helpful to review the last deleveraging cycle in 2011–2015. China’s huge stimulus in response to the global financial crisis (GFC) in 2008 led to significant overinvestment in infrastructure and overcapacity in upstream industries. A weak producer price index (PPI) was a symptom of that cycle, with the annual change in the PPI in negative territory for four consecutive years. On the other hand, consumption spending was holding up quite well back then. This round of deleveraging since 2021 is different. It had a significant impact on the property sector supply chain and a negative wealth effect on households. The symptom is weak consumption and deflation pressure (Figure 3).

(Fig. 2) Local government and land finance in China

Local government and land finance in China

As of July 2024.
Sources: Wind, Nomura Global Economics.
Revenue in 2024 is estimated using realized growth in July year‑to‑date. Actual outcomes may differ materially from estimates. Estimates are subject to change.

(Fig. 3) Weak consumption and deflation pressures are symptoms of China’s slowing economy

Weak consumption and deflation pressures are symptoms of China’s slowing economy

As of September 2024. 

    

Weak consumption and deflation pressures are symptoms of China’s slowing economy

As of June 2024.
Source: Bloomberg Finance L.P.
Grey shaded areas equal sustained periods of weak consumption and PPI deflation pressure.

Recent policy announcements directly target the weak links in the Chinese economy of property, local government debt, and consumption. We expect these initiatives to stop the negative feedback loop and put the economy back on a stable path over the coming quarters.

China’s long‑term economic transition remains intact

The near‑term policies focus on the imminent challenges of property and local government debt. However, China also needs new drivers to sustain high‑quality growth over the mid‑ to long term. We expect a gradual shift away from traditional fixed asset investment‑driven growth.

Over the past three decades, China has experienced four economic downturns. Each time, a new growth driver has emerged afterward. After the Asian financial crisis in the late 1990s, it was an export boom in the early 2000s; following the global financial crisis in 2008, it was increased infrastructure investment; the 2014–2015 downturn was followed by the property market boom. Looking ahead, we expect consumption and industrial upgrading to be the key factors that help to drive China’s next phase of economic growth.

Currently, China’s private consumption is less than 40% of gross domestic product, significantly below most other major economies. However, we think this could start to change. The Chinese government’s agenda has started to shift away from “hard infrastructure” to an emphasis more on “soft infrastructure.” That includes new urbanization, the social safety net, education, health care, and child‑care. These trends will be supportive of increasing consumption over the coming years.

(Fig. 4) Consumption: Diverging trends

Consumption-Diverging trends

As of August 31, 2024.
Sources: World Bank, NBS, BEA, CAO, Deutsche Bundesbank, Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (India), Haver Analytics, CEIC, Citi Research.

Ordinary trade and processing trade show diverging trend in China’s export

(Fig. 5) China export via ordinary trade and processing trade
Ordinary trade and processing trade show diverging trend in China’s export

As of September 30, 2024.
Sources: Wind, China Customs, Bernstein Research.

Technology and industrial upgrades are another key driver, both domestically and in the global market. China already accounts for over 30% of global manufacturing output. The future is more about increasing value added than pure volume. The effect of China’s industrial upgrade is well reflected in its export mix. China’s processing trade had declined over the past decade, but the ordinary trade, which carries much higher value added, more than doubled during the period.

After the PBOC’s announcement on September 24, the MSCI China Index rallied by over 30% in the following two weeks. This was followed by a 10% pullback when the market reopened on October 8 after China’s weeklong national holiday. We think economic improvement and a corporate earnings inflection are probably still two to three quarters away. The market currently is mostly trading on sentiment and policy expectations. Despite near‑term volatility, we see an improving outlook and attractive valuation. We are constructive on the outlook for Chinese equities over the next two to three years.

With the recent market recovery, MSCI China’s price/earnings ratio has rerated to near its 20‑year average but remains at a 20% discount to emerging markets ex‑China.1 After this broad‑based rerating, we think corporate fundamentals will be the key performance drivers going forward. From a bottom‑up perspective, we can continue to find compelling investment opportunities in China’s deep stock market.

(Fig. 6) MSCI China’s forward P/E has rerated near its 20‑year historical average from oversold levels

MSCI China’s forward P/E has rerated near its 20‑year historical average from oversold levels

As of October 11, 2024.
Sources: FactSet, MSCI, Goldman Sachs Global Investment Research.
SD = Standard deviation.

After three and a half years of market downturn and underperformance of growth stocks, select high‑quality growth stocks in China are trading at an attractive price. We continue to like our holdings in online recruiting, shopping malls, and hotel chains. These are scalable businesses with high earnings growth potential over the next few years. We believe they also stand to benefit from an improving macro outlook.

Another fertile hunting ground is industrial businesses with strong competitiveness and a favorable industry cycle. Examples include rail equipment, power grid upgrade, shipbuilding, and construction machinery. We expect these businesses to see accelerating earnings growth and improving returns over the coming quarters, with or without additional policy stimulus.

There are increasing opportunities for rising shareholder returns. In select industries, as businesses mature they enter the “harvest stage” and become highly cash generative. We look for Chinese companies with a combination of rising cash flow, disciplined capital allocation, and shareholder‑friendly mindset. We have found that combination in our holdings of telecom tower, outdoor media, and delivery companies.

Conclusion

China’s economic policy has reached the turning point from deleveraging to growth. This increased policy support could stabilize the economy by effectively addressing the property sector and local debt issues. We believe the transition to consumption and industrial upgrading will, over time, drive the next phase of China’s economic growth. We continue to find compelling opportunities in Chinese equities. We aim to build a balanced portfolio that will benefit from China’s economic transition in the coming years.

 

 

Risks—the following risks are materially relevant to the T. Rowe Price China Evolution Equity Strategy:

Country (China)—Chinese investments may be subject to higher levels of risks such as liquidity, currency, regulatory and legal risks due to the structure of the local market.

Currency—Currency exchange rate movements could reduce investment gains or increase investment losses.

Emerging markets—Emerging markets are less established than developed markets and therefore involve higher risks.

Issuer concentration—Issuer concentration risk may result in performance being more strongly affected by any business, industry, economic, financial or market conditions affecting those issuers in which the portfolio’s assets are concentrated.

Small and mid‑cap—Small and mid‑size company stock prices can be more volatile than stock prices of larger companies.

General Portfolio Risks

Equity—Equities can lose value rapidly for a variety of reasons and can remain at low prices indefinitely.

ESG and sustainability—ESG and Sustainability risk may result in a material negative impact on the value of an investment and performance of the portfolio.

Geographic concentration—Geographic concentration risk may result in performance being more strongly affected by any social, political, economic, environmental or market conditions affecting those countries or regions in which the portfolio’s assets are concentrated.

Hedging—Hedging measures involve costs and may work imperfectly, may not be feasible at times, or may fail completely.

Management—Management risk may result in potential conflicts of interest relating to the obligations of the investment manager.

Investment portfolio—Investing in portfolios involves certain risks an investor would not face if investing in markets directly.

Operational—Operational risk may cause losses as a result of incidents caused by people, systems, and/or processes.

Wenli Zheng Portfolio Manager, China Evolution Equity Strategy

Wenli Zheng is the portfolio manager of the China Evolution Equity Strategy in the International Equity Division. He also co-manages the Greater China portfolio of the International Small-Cap Equity Strategy. Wenli is a vice president of T. Rowe Price Group, Inc., and T. Rowe Price Hong Kong Limited.

 

1 Based on MSCI Indices. Valuation discount is as of October 11, 2024.

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202411‑4004355

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