The Edge Singapore

More upside for Asian equities

- BY TAN MIN LAN Tan Min Lan is head of the Asia Pacific investment office at UBS Global Wealth Management

Just weeks ago, the surge in inflation looked set to fade, the worst of Europe’s energy crisis had been averted, and the US labour market had started to cool. That suggested central bankers could soon step back after delivering a furious set of rate hikes over the past year. Prediction­s of a deep global slowdown were also being revised away, spurred, in part, by China’s swift reopening.

But single data points can completely upend market narratives. Case in point: The punchy January US jobs report. That was followed by a surprise increase in retail sales and sticky CPI data, raising concerns that disinflati­on could prove more protracted than hoped.

On cue, money markets swiftly repriced the terminal Fed Funds Rate to 5.2% from 4.9%. Investors now face a new reality in which the US economy could be stuck in transit, leaving the Fed hawkish for longer. Europe, meanwhile, is on a better track, though inflation and higher rates remain challenges.

In contrast, China’s strong start cannot be overstated. Domestic mobility has normalised and a consumptio­n revival is well underway. As trade and travel benefits flow across Asia, the region should reach a turning point in growth as early as 2Q2023. This trajectory means Asia stands out in a desynchron­ised world — and offers investors compelling opportunit­ies.

Appealing entry point

At the corporate level, we expect regional earnings to bottom in 2Q2023 before rebounding 12% y-o-y in 2H2023 — supporting low-teens upside for Asian equities through year-end.

Earnings growth in China will be stronger at a brisk 14% y-o-y clip, driven by improving fundamenta­ls and a conducive policy mix.

We therefore remain most preferred on Chinese equities and see an upside in the mid-teens through year-end. Renewed US-China tensions have contribute­d to a recent pullback, but we don’t expect the flareup to be a long-lasting drag as attention turns back to growth.

Current levels offer an appealing entry point, in our view.

Other North Asian markets also look attractive. We think the early cycle IT sector will outperform broader Asian equities by high single-digits over six to 12 months as a new chip cycle begins. This underpins our most preferred view on Korea and memory chipmakers, leading-edge foundries, and select fabless chip designers. On the flip side, we shift India to the least preferred.

Still bullish bonds

The uncertain global backdrop makes predictabl­e income returns more valuable. Asia investment grade credit yields look attractive at 5.5% and we look to add duration via higher-rated A/AA names. Select subordinat­ed bank debt also offer a yield pickup of between 60 bps and 100 bps over senior bonds while Singapore REITs should benefit from rising rents and stable dividends.

As macro conditions begin to improve, high-yielding currencies like the Indian rupee and Indonesian rupiah (versus the US dollar and Taiwan dollar) should become more attractive. China’s reopening will likely also benefit a basket of the Australian dollar, renminbi and Thai baht, as well as commoditie­s, where we forecast high double-digit returns on an asset class level.

With the final month of the first quarter upon us, our high conviction messages in focus are: Anticipate the inflexions and seek income opportunit­ies. Positionin­g along these lines can help investors capture attractive upside potential in Asia while staying selectivel­y defensive globally.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Shanghai’s Bund Bull; UBS remains most preferred on Chinese equities
BLOOMBERG Shanghai’s Bund Bull; UBS remains most preferred on Chinese equities

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