A recovery in consumer demand would be positive for China’s financial markets, in our view.
Foreign investors, chastened by global volatility and the zero-COVID policy, have become underweight China and largely remain so. Consumer demand and other signs of strength and durability in the recovery would likely lead to a rebalancing of portfolios in China’s favor.
There are risks to this outlook, however, which are best understood in the context of China’s broad policy framework.
Monitor Property for Signs of Stability
The framework has been shaped by President Xi Jinping’s aim of achieving a balance between growth and equitable social outcomes. As a result, investors should expect more moderate and sustainable growth and a focus on supporting innovation and manufacturing, lifting income per capita, reducing wealth inequality, and pursuing further market reforms.
The policy framework can be seen as positive in the long term, but it may lead to some short-term uncertainties. As already mentioned, China’s property market suffered significantly during the last two years, mainly because of regulatory intervention. This intervention was in keeping with President Xi’s social equity objectives.
But growth remains a government priority. This was confirmed in the government’s recent Central Economic Work Conference and has been underlined by the faster-than-expected reopening. It’s also evident in the housing sector, where the People’s Bank of China and the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission recently implemented measures to help the sector’s “stable and healthy development.”
For buyers and investors, these measures include lower mortgage rates, a lower down payment ratio on mortgages, relaxation of home-purchase eligibility, and cash subsidies for home purchases. For property developers, they include making it easier to comply with borrowing restrictions introduced during the crackdown.
While these actions are encouraging, we believe that investors should continue to look carefully for signs of stability in the housing sector when assessing the overall balance of risks and opportunities in the economy.
Inflation Should Be Benign
Another risk is that reopening will cause inflation to rise in China, as happened in other countries when they emerged from the pandemic. But, in our view, any inflationary effects are likely to be benign. While it’s possible that the Core Consumer Price Index will edge higher, we don’t think it will rise to the levels seen in developed markets.
One reason is that, while household savings in China have increased, the government support extended to individuals and business during lockdowns has been significantly lower than in the US and Australia, for example.
Another reason is that the dynamics of food inflation in Asia, including China, are different from those of other countries. For example, non-Asia emerging-market food inflation has risen dramatically during the last two years in response to the war in Ukraine and supply chain issues. The same is true for the prices of Western staple food crops wheat and maize. Asia food inflation and the price of rice have remained stable, however.
There is little likelihood, in our view, that inflation will rise sharply in China. Consequently, we expect policy settings to remain supportive for growth.
Asia’s Boats Are Likely to Rise on China’s Tide
For now, China’s government bond yields lag those of US Treasuries, because of the countries’ different inflation and interest-rate trajectories. Because of this, the near-term opportunity for fixed-income investors created by China’s reopening lies, in our view, not in China’s bond market so much as in the credit and currency markets of its Asian trading partners.
China’s biggest trading partner is the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), and four Asian countries that are not ASEAN members are among China’s top 13 trading partners. China in turn is the top trading partner for eight of these countries and either the second or third biggest trading partner for the rest.
We expect the country’s reopening to ease supply chain pressures across the region and provide a direct boost to some industry sectors. One area likely to benefit is tourism, as China’s outbound tourism recovers from the collapse it suffered because of COVID.
Increased trade with China would be positive for these countries’ corporate bond markets and their currencies should benefit, too. With the US dollar’s strength appearing to have run its course in the near term, the biggest headwind faced by Asian currencies during 2022 has dissipated, and emerging Asian currencies have appreciated significantly.
We regard this as positive for Asian currencies across the board. And, if the US dollar rebounds, we expect high-yield Asian currencies to outperform their regional peers on a total return basis.
Asian Markets Could Outperform in 2023
With China reopening and the rest of the global economy likely to be challenged during 2023, we believe there is ample room for both foreign and domestic investors to allocate to the region. Stronger growth in China should lead to stronger growth in Asia, creating conditions that, in our view, could lead to Asian markets outperforming in 2023 and beyond.