National Post

China equities on the investor radar

US$8T market begins to open up to outsiders

- Barry Critchley Off the Record bcritchley@postmedia.com

On the eve of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s four- day visit to China, New York- based money manager Alliance Bernstein held a series of seminars across Canada this week on investment opportunit­ies in the world’s second-largest economy.

And, according to John Lin, a Hong Kong- based Alliance Bernstein portfolio manager who invests in Chinese equities, those opportunit­ies will grow as China continues to open up both its economy and financial markets to outsiders.

One number was staggering: the domestic Chinese stock market — which is only available to a limited number of outside investors, specifical­ly the large non- Chinese i nstitution­s who have received approval to participat­e — is home to almost 3,200 issuers. Those issuers have a market cap (as of Sept. 30) of US$ 8.05 trillion. That market is known as the A-shares.

At that level, the market is more than three times the total value of those Chinese companies that have listed i n Hong Kong and more than 10 times the size of the Chinese companies t hat have used ADRs ( American Depository Receipts) to list on NYSE or Nasdaq.

“When was the last time in anyone’s i nvestment career that an US$ 8 trillion market ( all of a sudden) moves onto the radar screen?” asked Lin.

Another way to view that number: companies listed on the TSX have a market cap of about $ 3 trillion, meaning the A- share market is more than three times as large as Canada’s — even if some of the characteri­stics are different from what occurs here. For instance, investors have a very shortterm focus, daily turnover is massive, and retail investors and not institutio­ns, dominate. “The ( mutual funds) turn over their portfolio managers as quickly as they turn over their stocks,” said Lin, declaring China Ashares is the world’s “most inefficien­t market.”

What makes China’s Ashares so topical is that in June, 2018, some of those A- shares will be included in the Morgan Stanley Capital Index emerging markets ( EM) index, a popular benchmark against which money managers are rated. ( The non- domestic China shares currently have a 28.6- per- cent weight in the EM index. The A- shares will also be included in the MSCI all-country world index.)

That decision was announced last June. MSCI said the decision reflects “the positive impact on the accessibil­ity of the China A market ... and the loosening by the local Chinese stock exchanges of pre- approval requiremen­ts that can restrict the creation of index- linked investment vehicles globally.”

MSCI plans to add 222 companies at a 5 per cent “partial inclusion factor” which will give the A shares a 0.73-per-cent weight in the overall EM index. With a full inclusion of the 222 stocks the weight of the A- shares would rise to 12.8 per cent.

“It’s a matter of time. It’s going to happen,” said Lin noting the inclusion news is significan­t because the Ashares have a different profile than other China shares.

“Investors getting their China e x posure solely through the offshore market are missing out on diversific­ation benefits,” he said when referring to different sector weights ( technology, for example is about 40 per cent of the offshore market but 10 per cent of the A share market), the different type of investors and the different multiples that apply in the two markets.

Without A- shares, Lin said, investors “won’t be getting exposure to the middle class consumptio­n growth, ( and) to aging demographi­c and the need for health care.”

Investors that want to participat­e in that market now have seven months to find a way.

 ?? LEAH HENNEL / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Canada’s natural environmen­t score improved in the Legatum Institute Prosperity Index global rankings.
LEAH HENNEL / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Canada’s natural environmen­t score improved in the Legatum Institute Prosperity Index global rankings.
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