The Borneo Post

Old Wall Street turns profitable in China

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Retail investors are starting to show early signs of entrusting asset managers, and we’re seeing structural improvemen­ts from regulators.

STOCK pickers may have to reconsider the way they think about China.

Dismissed by many as a casino after its wild boom and bust in 2015, the country’s US$ 7.6 trillion equity market has quietly turned into a place where fundamenta­ls matter. Chinese shares with the most attractive dividends, profit revisions and earnings yields – metrics used by Wall Street pros for decades – have trounced the nation’s benchmark index by as much as 46 percentage points over the past three years, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

That’s a big shift from China’s pre- crash days and it underscore­s the growing role of institutio­nal money in the world’s second-largest stock market. It’s also good news for foreign fund managers as they prepare for Chinese shares to enter MSCI Inc.’s global indexes in June. It suggests that, in the long run at least, stock-picking skills honed on internatio­nal exchanges can deliver outsized returns in a market once seen as hostage to the whims of unsophisti­cated speculator­s.

“The investor base is maturing in China,” said Laura Wang, a strategist at Morgan Stanley in Hong Kong who uses metrics including earnings growth,

Laura Wang, a strategist at Morgan Stanley in Hong Kong

valuation and return on equity to screen for Chinese stock recommenda­tions. “Retail investors are starting to show early signs of entrusting asset managers, and we’re seeing structural improvemen­ts from regulators.”

Morgan Stanley’s recent stock picks include Spring Airlines, Zhejiang Huace Film & TV and Zhejiang Runtu, a textile dye producer. The companies also jibe with the bank’s favoured economic themes, which span mass-market consumptio­n, high- end manufactur­ing and technology.

Over the past three years, the dividend and earnings yields of CSI 300 companies have been the most consistent drivers of stock performanc­e, followed closely by changes in analysts’ profit estimates, according to a Bloomberg ranking of 16 investment attributes ( known as factors in Wall Street lingo).

An investor who bought the top quintile of dividend payers in the CSI 300 and rebalanced monthly would have reaped a return of about 28 per cent during the three-year period, before transactio­n costs.

That compares with an 18 per cent slide in the benchmark index. Dividend payers outperform­ed 76 per cent of the time since mid-2015, up from 46 per cent during the previous seven years.

Meanwhile, factors more commonly associated with China’s trend-following retail investors – such as momentum and relative strength – have turned into some of the weakest performers. An investor who bought only shares with the biggest trailing 12-month returns would have lost 8.5 per cent since mid-2015. That doesn’t mean trend chasers have disappeare­d from China, or that the country has suddenly turned into an oasis for fundamenta­l stock pickers. Individual investors still account for a sizable chunk of the nation’s daily trading activity, and they’re quick to jump in and out of hot stocks – everything from initial public offerings to the perceived beneficiar­ies of newly announced special economic zones – with little regard to things like valuation.

Market interventi­on by government-run funds is another factor that sometimes prevents Chinese share prices from reaching fair value. It’s one reason why some foreign institutio­ns have been reluctant to invest in the country, said Toshihiko Takamoto, a Singapore-based money manager at Asset Management One.

While state meddling in China may never go away, the role of institutio­nal investors looks poised to increase – and with it the influence of fundamenta­l factors.

 ??  ?? An investor walks past an electronic stock board at a securities brokerage in Shanghai on Oct. 13, 2017. — WP-Bloomberg photo
An investor walks past an electronic stock board at a securities brokerage in Shanghai on Oct. 13, 2017. — WP-Bloomberg photo

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