Investors Have Soured on China’s Stocks, Renewing Fears About Economy (2024)

Advertisem*nt

SKIP ADVERTIsem*nT

Supported by

SKIP ADVERTIsem*nT

They initially reacted enthusiastically to China’s reversal of pandemic restrictions but have since taken a dimmer view of the country’s recovery.

Investors Have Soured on China’s Stocks, Renewing Fears About Economy (1)

By Vivek Shankar

Reporting from Seoul

阅读简体中文版閱讀繁體中文版

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 percent 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.

Beijing 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 percent, a rate that was one of the slowest in decades, well short of Beijing’s own target and slower than that of 2021.

Image

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 percent — with consumers responsible for the bulk of the gain — and appeared to be on track for a recovery. Spending 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,” Ms. 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 calls for 5 percent 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 12 percent 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.

Image

“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, Mr. Leung said, the Chinese economy “is not too out of line.”

On Thursday, a private-sector survey showed that factory activity in China had picked up in May, in contrast to official data released a day earlier that showed manufacturing had continued to contract. The mixed signals have broader implications, because manufacturing in China is closely linked to its exports, which, in turn, are an indicator of global demand. A sustained increase in manufacturing would help bump up China’s employment rate, its consumer spending and, eventually, its stock market.

For now, investors continue to offload Chinese stocks. The biggest losers this year include the online retailer JD.com and the hot pot chain Haidilao, both down over 20 percent this year. That helped push down Hong Kong’s Hang Seng China Enterprises Index to the lowest closing level of the year on Thursday. After a rally on Friday, the index is about 17 percent lower than its high in January. The CSI 300 Index, which tracks the biggest companies listed in Shanghai and Shenzhen, is down about 8 percent since peaking in January.

Performance of stock market indexes in 2023

The real estate sector continues to be a source of anguish for investors. Property sales from the 100 biggest firms fell about 14 percent in May from the previous month, according to data released this week by China Real Estate Information Corporation.

China’s housing problems — developers that are deep in debt and borrowers who are left with half-finished apartments — have led to expectations that the Chinese central bank will feel compelled to cut rates this year.

Both Nomura and Barclays forecast that China will post significantly higher economic growth — of almost 8 percent — in the three months ending in June. Growth for the next two quarters of the year will then moderate toward levels seen earlier this year, according to both projections.

Along the way, analysts expect stock market performance to improve. “Excessive pessimism usually corrects itself,” Mr. Leung said.

Vivek Shankar is a senior staff editor on the International desk. Previously, he worked for Bloomberg News in San Francisco, Sydney and Washington. More about Vivek Shankar

A version of this article appears in print on , Section

B

, Page

4

of the New York edition

with the headline:

Investors Have Gone Sour on China’s Stocks. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

Advertisem*nt

SKIP ADVERTIsem*nT

Investors Have Soured on China’s Stocks, Renewing Fears About Economy (2024)

FAQs

What investors are saying about China's market meltdown? ›

China's crashing stock market could be the breaking point for foreign investors, Atlantic Council's Jeremy Mark said. The market will become more volatile as remaining investors focus on fast profits. The country needs to respond to its property crisis to trigger a stable market recovery.

Why is China's stock market failing? ›

China's well-documented economic struggles have led to broad declines in its stock markets over the past year, as growth was weighed down by a slump in real estate and exports. The Chinese government is targeting 5% growth in 2024, having notched 5.2% in 2023.

What are the problems with investing in China? ›

Companies are being raided and employees detained. The CCP is clearly more interested in control than growth. This has directly influenced foreign investment because of Chinese efforts to close and otherwise harass companies that undertake due diligence services for foreign investors.

Is it good time to invest in China stocks? ›

At Coutts we're currently neutral on Chinese stocks. This is because of structural challenges sitting behind China's stock market drop, and the state intervening in markets to spend excess cash from a huge trade surplus. For us, this doesn't represent a very solid foundation on which to grow.

Why foreign investors are leaving China? ›

The prolonged slowdown in China's economic growth is another reason foreign companies are refraining from investing. Domestic demand is weak due in part to the real estate market slump, and there are warning signs for deflation.

Why investors are investing in China? ›

China's infrastructure investment is a key driver of economic growth. The country boasts the largest network of high-speed rail and expressways in terms of mileage, which allows products to be transported efficiently.

Is China Stock Market Crashing? ›

Investors are Bearish on the Chinese Market

Every index tracking China share prices had a terrible 2023, with the declines continuing through last month. That includes indexes in China's markets, Hong Kong, and those tracking Chinese companies on Wall Street.

Why is China's economy crashing? ›

Many pundits blame governments whenever economies crash, but the real cause of China's slump is the long period of fast growth that piled up vulnerable and unsustainable debts. The higher they fly, the harder they fall.

Is China in trouble for the economy? ›

China's economy is at a turning point. An old economic model underpinned by heavy investment in infrastructure and real estate is crumbling. Growth is slowing and prices are falling, raising the specter of a Japan-style slide into stagnation. How did the world's second-largest economy get into such a mess?

Where is China investing most? ›

However, more than 60 percent of the total FDI volume in 2022 was transferred to Asia's financial hub, Hong Kong, and around ten percent to the Cayman Islands and British Virgin Islands, which makes it difficult to identify final investment destinations.

Is China a safe place to invest? ›

What are some of the drawbacks of investing in China? One of the key risks of investing in China is the regulatory environment. The Chinese government introduced a raft of heavy-duty regulations against technology firms in 2020, amid concerns over their influence.

Where is China investing their money? ›

Although energy has remained China's primary sector for investment in the region, Chinese capital has gradually diversified into sectors such as transportation, real estate, technology and tourism.

Are China stocks recovering? ›

The rebound is promising, soothing three years of losses when the index tumbled from its all-time high in February 2021. In all, almost US$10 trillion have been erased from Chinese stocks listed at home and overseas over the past three years.

What is the best Chinese stock to buy right now? ›

5 Best Chinese Stocks to Buy Now
  • Tencent TCEHY.
  • Yum China YUMC.
  • Baidu BIDU.
  • JD.com JD.
  • Alibaba BABA.
Apr 12, 2024

Are global funds returning to China? ›

A shift away from Chinese equities by global long-term investors has taken a pause, with some funds getting less bearish, according to Morgan Stanley.

Has the China market bottomed? ›

Bottom Line

Despite recent challenges such as the COVID-19 pandemic, a real estate crisis, and a sluggish economy leading to a significant underperformance in Chinese equities over the past few years, there are indications that the Chinese market may be bottoming out.

Is China's stock market collapse the end of the road for many foreign investors? ›

China's crashing stock market could be the breaking point for foreign investors, Atlantic Council's Jeremy Mark said. The market will become more volatile as remaining investors focus on fast profits. The country needs to respond to its property crisis to trigger a stable market recovery.

Is China in bad financial situation? ›

China's overall debts have widened to the equivalent of more than 300% of gross domestic product, far in excess of the 253% of GDP the U.S. owes. A chunk of China's debt is owed by its local governments.

How much has China's stock market fallen? ›

Throw in Hong Kong's exchange, which primarily lists Chinese companies, and since 2021, China's stock markets have lost about $7 trillion in value.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Patricia Veum II

Last Updated:

Views: 6432

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (64 voted)

Reviews: 87% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Patricia Veum II

Birthday: 1994-12-16

Address: 2064 Little Summit, Goldieton, MS 97651-0862

Phone: +6873952696715

Job: Principal Officer

Hobby: Rafting, Cabaret, Candle making, Jigsaw puzzles, Inline skating, Magic, Graffiti

Introduction: My name is Patricia Veum II, I am a vast, combative, smiling, famous, inexpensive, zealous, sparkling person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.