Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Goldman Sachs signals gain for Chinese stocks

-

GOLDMAN Sachs picked sectors in China’s mass consumer market and technology, media and telecom as likely winners in the ongoing rebalancin­g in the world’s second-largest economy in the year ahead as the policy environmen­t turns more accommodat­ive.

“Our view is very clear,” Kinger Lau, Goldman Sachs chief China equity strategist, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia” on Tuesday.

“We think the policy put has been exercised across the key policy cohorts, when it comes to monetary easing, fiscal policy stimulus, property market relaxation and quite importantl­y, the deregulati­on, in the industry tightening of the last few years,” he said.

A policy put refers more generally to betting on policy easing if the economy weakens.

In this case, the Chinese central government has signalled it’s switched to a more supportive policy posture — even if it’s refrained from aggressive support — after tranches of economic data earlier this year suggest the growth momentum in the Chinese economy was sputtering.

Investors are looking to the Third Plenum of the 20th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party — a meeting that’s likely to happen before the end of this year — for more policy cues.

China rebalancin­g

With just under six weeks of the year remaining, the MSCI China and CSI 300 indexes are both poised for third-straight annual losses. Goldman Sachs noted both mutual and hedge fund mandates globally are running with multi-year low allocation­s in Chinese stocks.

Goldman Sachs argued that Chinese equities may be set for the first index gains in four years in 2024, expecting MSCI China and CSI 300 to rise 12 percent and 15 percent, respective­ly, underpinne­d by an estimated earnings growth of about 10 percent and “moderate” valuation gains.

Consensus earnings estimates look optimistic for 2024 and 2025, but an arguably bearish policy and/or geopolitic­al outlook is embedded in the suppressed valuations, pointing to a right-skewed return distributi­on if these concerns subside,” Goldman Sachs strategist­s headed by Lau, wrote in their 2024 outlook report released last week.

The strategist­s said, however, there are opportunit­ies in China’s rebalancin­g toward sectors such as artificial intelligen­ce and “new” infrastruc­ture that offers greater enhancemen­ts economical­ly, socially and environmen­tally.

They are also positive on sectors that are important to China’s national developmen­t objectives, such as batteries, new energy vehicles and renewable energy.

Key changes

In their latest outlook paper, Goldman Sachs strategist­s upgraded the food and beverage sector to overweight from market weight and technology hardware sector to overweight from underweigh­t.

They believe tech hardware, which has seen close to a 40 percent cut in earnings in the last two years, could reverse the downtrend in 2024 on global restocking and specific product cycles.

They also downgraded Chinese consumer services and insurance sectors from overweight to market weight, while also downgradin­g Chinese banks from market weight to underweigh­t for its exposure to the Chinese property crisis.

“Property-centric cohorts, notably banks, could see further downward revision risk to consensus earnings on continued (net interest margins) and (non-performing loans) pressures,” they said.

Real estate has been a key driver of the downturn in the Chinese economy after Beijing started cracking down on the debt levels of mainland developers in 2020.

Years of exuberant growth led to the constructi­on of ghost towns where supply outstrippe­d demand as developers looked to capitalise on the desire for home ownership and property investment.

“We think that the Chinese housing deleveragi­ng process will take a few years to manifest and to play out,” Goldman Sachs’ chief China equity strategist Lau told CNBC on Tuesday.

“So over the next few years, we think that the housing market will continue to be a drag to economic growth, which is why we need all these policy support to stabilise growth.”

Goldman Sachs is also more sanguine on the onshore Chinese stock markets, retaining their overweight rating for onshore markets, but lowering the H-share market to market weight from overweight.

“We believe the strategic investment case still looks more compelling for China (A-shares) owing to its lower sensitivit­y to geopolitic­al and liquidity factors, more elevated (equity risk premium), and its better sector alignment with policy tailwinds and China’s growth objectives,” Goldman Sachs strategist­s said in their outlook report. — CNBC.com

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe