Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

China’s post-covid recovery fizzles

Stocks slump in Hong Kong, adding to fears for economy

- VIVEK SHANKAR

The wager was supposed to be a no- brainer. China was reopening after nearly three years of pandemic lockdowns, and investors expected that its economy, the world’s second-largest, would come roaring back to life. Chinese stocks soared.

But that bet has soured. This week, Chinese stocks that are traded in Hong Kong sank briefly into a bear market after losing more than 20% of their value from a high in January. Stocks on the mainland are also in the red for the year.

The declines reflect a fizzling optimism in the viability of the post-covid recovery in China, which has long been a driver of global growth. Despite the continuing geopolitic­al tensions between China and the United States, the economic and business ties between the two countries remain intricatel­y linked.

“All the signals from China are pointing to a bumpy, faltering economic rebound,” said Tina Teng, an analyst with CMC Markets in Auckland, New Zealand.

China is contending with weaker-than-expected consumer spending, slowing home sales and a manufactur­ing sector in flux. A weaker currency is compoundin­g the problems. It remains uncertain what, if any, action the Chinese government might take to support growth.

Last year, numerous covid lockdowns took a heavy toll on China’s economy. It grew 3%, a rate that was one of the slowest in decades, well short of China’s own target and slower than that of 2021.

The authoritie­s gave the stock market a jolt last fall with stimulus measures designed to support the property sector. Another bump followed in December, with the abrupt end of the strict “zero covid” policy. Stocks entered the new year on an upward trajectory and peaked toward the end of January.

In the first three months of the year, China’s economy grew 4.5% — with consumers responsibl­e for the bulk of the gain — and appeared on track for a recovery. Spend

ing has been strong in recent months, notably in the luxury and food and beverage sectors, but increasing­ly hasn’t met investors’ expectatio­ns. A high rate of youth unemployme­nt further darkens the outlook. While countries in the West contend with inflation, China is flirting with the opposite and potentiall­y more malign force of deflation, or persistent­ly low prices that drag on the economy by dampening company profits and wages.

“Domestic demand is still weak,” Teng said.

Consequent­ly, many economists have dialed back their expectatio­ns in recent weeks, contributi­ng to the stock market decline. But a number of analysts, including those at the investment banks Nomura and Barclays, still expect China’s gross domestic product this year to increase at a faster rate than the government’s forecast, which predicts 5% growth.

Projection­s for the U. S. economy, the world’s largest, are lower, but American stocks are faring much better than China’s. The S&P 500, a broad index of stocks, is up about 10% this year.

Recent decisions by the Communist Party of China and its top leader, Xi Jinping, have hurt stock market sentiment. A crackdown on consulting and advisory firms with overseas ties has spooked some foreign businesses and investors, reigniting questions about the viability of internatio­nal firms doing business in China.

“The recovery has stalled, due partly to Beijing’s inability to boost confidence among consumers and business investors,” Nomura economists wrote in a report last month. “As disappoint­ment kicks in, we see a rising risk of a downward spiral, resulting in weaker activity data, rising unemployme­nt, persistent disinflati­on, falling market interest rates and a weaker currency.”

But some observers argue that investors have just misjudged the reopening of the economy in China — an event that has no historical parallel. And they have missed a shift in how the authoritie­s prioritize national security concerns over economic ones.

“The mentality of the way the Chinese economy is managed is completely different,” said Chris Leung, the chief China economist at DBS Bank. The authoritie­s, he added, are not as likely as they were in the past to respond to a stock market slump by taking aggressive steps to drive up share prices. Policymake­rs in Beijing are focused more on economic bellwether­s like manufactur­ing. And by those measures, Leung said, the Chinese economy “is not too out of line.”

 ?? (AP/Mark Schiefelbe­in) ?? People look at strands of lights wrapped around trees along a street near a shopping mall in Beijing on Friday.
(AP/Mark Schiefelbe­in) People look at strands of lights wrapped around trees along a street near a shopping mall in Beijing on Friday.

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