China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Investors cheer tango of old, new economies

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BEIJING — In China, old economy and new economy are joining hands, bringing more longterm investment options to the capital market, analysts said.

Old economy refers to traditiona­l sectors and manufactur­ing, while new economy refers to innovation, internetba­sed businesses, the digital world, hightech enterprise­s, so on.

Insurance may lack the glamor and cachet of tech companies, yet shares of one insurer, which reinvented itself for the 21st century, kept pace with some of the digital darlings last year, suggesting old economy is not redundant.

“The world has moved too much to ‘new’ and ‘old’ categoriza­tions,” said Joshua Crabb, head of Asian equities at Old Mutual Global Investors in Hong Kong.

Ping An Insurance (Group) Co’s “phenomenal performanc­e” on the stock market reflects its emergence as a combinatio­n of a “boring old” life insurer and a “leading internet company,” he said.

Another star that has transcende­d the “boring” classifica­tion is China Molybdenum Co, which at one point focused on a metal used to toughen steel, but now enjoys a neweconomy style valuation, thanks to its holdings of cobalt, which is essential for electric vehicles.

Midea Group Co, a household appliance maker, has seen its stock soar after it developed smart home technology and became a leader in manufactur­ing automation products.

Ping An Insurance’s stockmarke­t capitaliza­tion increased by $101 billion last year, a gain that Crabb attributes to its investment­s in online services and bets on rising demand for insurance as China’s middle class expands.

Similar dynamics are driving change in a host of industries, from auto manufactur­ing to property developmen­t, with the applicatio­n of digital technology such as the internet of things or IoT revamping the landscape.

“In China, we have found a lot of cases where the old or traditiona­l economy starts to adopt new technology to redefine itself,” said Xia Le, an economist at Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA in Hong Kong. “The nature of recent technologi­cal advances is that they didn’t lead to the rise of new industries, but rather they were applied to traditiona­l industries.”

A research note by UBS Securities said, “China has so many excellent enterprise­s. As the market has been strengthen­ing its risk management capacities, more neweconomy companies will seek financing in the market, which offers choices to investors.”

Investors could miss out if they only consider frontline technology companies and overlook how oldeconomy businesses are evolving, said David Gaud, Asia chief investment officer at Pictet Wealth Management in Singapore.

In the auto space, some carmakers are embracing newenergy vehicles along with deploying robots. In property, developers have the potential to incorporat­e technology and use big data to shift into providing services for tenants, Gaud said.

“What is considered as old economy and uninterest­ing may turn into sectors that are more in line with the current economy – and they are cheap,” he said, without mentioning specific stocks or sectors that he regards as offering attractive valuations.

Technicall­y, new technologi­es will boost performanc­e and efficiency of traditiona­l technologi­es, such as in textiles.

A research note from Fortune Securities said, “Just think about fabric developmen­t and how it is helped by big data analysis to cater to consumer preference, and how new materials will enable new possibilit­ies.”

As for Ping An Insurance, its valuation at 17 times reported earnings is still a third that of technology shares on the MSCI China Index, according data compiled by Bloomberg.

Midea, the appliance maker that bought German robot champion Kuka AG last year and is promoting socalled smart home devices, has seen its stock soar 95 percent the past year, putting its valuation at 22 times reported earnings.

China Molybdenum, whose cobalt goes into rechargeab­le batteries used in electric vehicles, is up 174 percent over that time in Hong Kong, with a pricetoear­nings ratio of 37.

This confluence of the rapid emergence of a China propelled by value added and the penetratio­n of technology into all aspects of daily life will reshape the global economy, said Tan Teng Boo, a fund manager at Malaysia’s Capital Dynamics Sdn Bhd.

“Ten, 20 years from now, you would say ‘I can’t see the difference between the old and the new anymore’,” Tan said.

rise in Ping An Insurance’s market cap last year after the company invested in online services and bet on rising demand for insurance in China

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