Interactive Investor

Five reasons to invest in China

3rd March 2023 09:25

by ​​​​​​​Stella Li and Elizabeth Kwik from abrdn

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China equities have rallied strongly, driven by the government’s surprising easing of many strict ‘zero-Covid’ policies in January. Given the consequent boost to the economy, we believe the China rally has further to run in 2023.

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Since the lows of October last year, China equities have rallied strongly. The Shanghai A-share index is up 6.5% year to date1 . This has primarily been driven by the government’s surprising easing of many strict ‘zero-Covid’ policies in January. Given the consequent boost to the economy, we believe the China rally has further to run in 2023.

However, we are long-term investors. Our job is to gauge what the Chinese economic and investment landscape will look like many years from now. We believe five major themes will shape China’s path to greater prosperity – aspiration, digital, green, health and wealth.

Over the next six weeks, we will look at each of these factors, detailing why we think they’re important and the companies leading the way within each field.

But before we do, let’s look at why we are bullish about China in the short term.

Reopening to unleash consumption

As we highlighted, the main near-term positive is the government’s recent easing of far-reaching Covid restrictions. This will have a strong positive impact by unleashing pent-up consumption demand for goods and services, which had been severely checked by movement restrictions. There will also be a normalisation of local manufacturing production, which should ease not just local but also global supply-chain issues.

Economic outlook ‘opposite’ to elsewhere

All this should boost China’s economic growth. abrdn’s Research Institute (aRI) recently hiked its 2023 real GDP growth forecast from 2.9% in 2022 to 5.5% this year. Meanwhile, the absence of inflationary pressures in China should allow far more accommodative monetary policy than much of the rest of the world.

In marked contrast, owing in large part to the negative impact of unprecedented monetary tightening, aRI expects US real GDP will contract slightly by -0.1% in 2023. Weak conditions and rate-hiking are also prevailing in many other developed regions, including Europe. In sum, China’s growth/policy backdrop is in a sense ‘opposite’ to much of the western world, and undoubtedly supportive of Chinese corporate performance.

Cheap valuations compared to history and other markets

Relatively attractive equity valuations further underpin our confidence in China. Despite the recent rally, China equities’ forward price-earnings (P/E) of 12.8 is 15% lower than the 15-year average, while the price-to-book (P/B) ratio of 1.9 is 10% lower than the 15-year average. By comparison, for developed market (DM) equities, forward P/E of 15.6 and P/B of 2.8 are significantly higher than China, with the former broadly in line with DMs’ 15-year average, and the latter 29% above the 15-year average2 .

What are the risks?

On the Covid front, the possibility of reversion to mobility restrictions cannot be overruled. However, given rising natural immunity, and with the authorities noting mounting public disaffection last year, the likelihood of this seems low. On the geopolitical front, the risk of escalating tensions with Taiwan remains ever-present. However, periodic posturing aside, the likelihood of conflict remains low. Furthermore, Russia’s recent experience in Ukraine also reduces the risk of any serious misadventure.

Two of the more meaningful China-specific risks are ongoing trade tensions with the US and continued problems in the real estate sector. However, in our view, these risks should be manageable both from an overall China growth and policymaking perspective, and for active investors via portfolio positioning and construction.

Five powerful structural growth themes

Looking further ahead, we believe five key themes will drive the Chinese economy over the coming decades. 

Aspiration - rising wealth and a growing aspirational middle class will drive demand for premium goods and services over the coming decades.

Digital - increasing connectivity amid the widespread adoption of technology means a bright future for plays on cybersecurity, the cloud, ‘software as a service’ and smart homes.

Green - policymakers globally are committing to a greener and lower carbon world, and China is in the driver’s seat. Developments in renewable energy, batteries, electric vehicles and related infrastructure offer great potential. Grid parity, when renewable energy is the same as existing power from the grid, could be game-changing.

Health - fast-increasing disposable incomes are driving demand for healthcare products and services. The opportunity set is diverse, from hospitals and medical equipment providers to research firms and drug & supplement producers.

Wealth - growing prosperity means structural growth for consumer finance, investment services and insurance.

You can read about these and the companies driving these themes in the coming weeks.

You can also find out more about our own China solutions here.

[1] Bloomberg 20 February 2023

[2] abrdn 31 January 2023

Stella Li and Elizabeth Kwik are Investment Directors at abrdn

ii is an abrdn business. 
abrdn is a global investment company that helps customers plan, save and invest for their future.

These articles are provided for information purposes only.  Occasionally, an opinion about whether to buy or sell a specific investment may be provided by third parties.  The content is not intended to be a personal recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument or product, or to adopt any investment strategy as it is not provided based on an assessment of your investing knowledge and experience, your financial situation or your investment objectives. The value of your investments, and the income derived from them, may go down as well as up. You may not get back all the money that you invest. The investments referred to in this article may not be suitable for all investors, and if in doubt, an investor should seek advice from a qualified investment adviser.

Full performance can be found on the company or index summary page on the interactive investor website. Simply click on the company's or index name highlighted in the article.

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