logo
Xi's price-war campaign creates buzz in China's stock market

Xi's price-war campaign creates buzz in China's stock market

Business Times5 days ago
For strategists at JPMorgan Chase & Co and Goldman Sachs Group as well as money managers in Hong Kong and Singapore, an opaque term has suddenly emerged as the catchphrase for deciphering Chinese policy intentions and navigating the stock market.
The term 'anti-involution' has cropped up in government documents over the past year, but gained prominence earlier this month when President Xi Jinping chaired a high-level meeting that pledged to regulate 'disorderly' price competition. It refers to efforts to root out China's industrial malaise, marked by cut-throat price wars and overcapacity that have hurt profitability in sectors ranging from solar, new energy vehicles to steel.
Investors are hopeful that a more coordinated policy response to tackle the drivers of deflation is on its way, though Beijing has not yet released any plan. Analyst reports on the theme have flooded the market, while solar and steel stocks have rallied in July. Morgan Stanley strategists changed their preference to onshore shares from those in Hong Kong last week.
'One of the biggest issues that investors have investing in China is that of excessive competition,' said Tan Min Lan, head of the Asia-Pacific chief investment office at UBS. 'It's actually a very positive development that top down government is now recognising it, and directly saying that destructive competition has to stop. It's a powerful policy signal.'
' One of the biggest issues that investors have investing in China is that of excessive competition. It's actually a very positive development that top down government is now recognising it, and directly saying that destructive competition has to stop. It's a powerful policy signal. '

Tan Min Lan, head of the Asia-Pacific chief investment office at UBS
The Chinese term for involution, neijuan, literally means rolling inwards. In practice, it is used to describe a system of intense competition that yields little meaningful progress.
Huge spending on building capacity has helped Chinese businesses enhance their global standing. The nation's companies now dominate every step of the solar supply chain, while its electric vehicle (EV) makers have toppled Tesla's dominance. Yet, ending destructive competition has rarely been more important. Producer deflation is worsening, and trade tensions mean China can no longer unleash some of its overcapacity to other countries.
BT in your inbox
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Sign Up
Sign Up
'With foreign markets closing off Chinese trade routes, part of the competition is forced to return to the domestic market,' said Jasmine Duan, senior investment strategist at RBC Wealth Management Asia.
The campaign seems to be helping improve investor sentiment for the mainland market, where policy drivers have a stronger sway and industrial stocks have bigger weighting. The onshore CSI 300 Index has risen 2 per cent so far in July, outperforming the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index after lagging it for most of the year.
Solar stocks Xinjiang Daqo New Energy and Tongwei have advanced at least 19 per cent this month. Liuzhou Iron & Steel has surged more than 50 per cent while Angang Steel has gained about 16 per cent. Glass, cement and chemicals shares have also jumped.
It is still early stages but if the reforms pan out, 'there'll be consolidation in China and there'll be slightly better pricing and margins, and there'll be better valuation', said Wendy Liu, head of China and Hong Kong equity strategist at JPMorgan. Sectors that are likely to benefit include cars, battery, solar, cement, steel, aluminium and chemicals, she said.
To seasoned China watchers, the current rhetoric recalls the supply-side reforms of 2015-2018, when a government-led push to cut outdated capacity in sectors such as coal and steel helped drive up prices in the following years.
This time, however, key differences may limit the campaign's effectiveness. A decade ago, oversupply was mostly concentrated in upstream and construction-related sectors. It has become more pervasive today, encompassing the most promising industries of solar, EV and battery to downstream consumer sectors such healthcare and food.
Intensifying price war
That point is illustrated by the intensifying price war among technology giants listed in Hong Kong – China's private sector leaders. Shares in Meituan, Alibaba Group Holding and JD.com have slumped more than 20 per cent from their March highs as they jostle for delivery market expansion.
'This time, the overcapacity is concentrated in industries mostly dominated by private firms, so the challenges are going to be greater than when SOEs (state-owned enterprises) ruled and could just buy up the private firms and shut them down,' said Li Shouqiang, a fund manager at Shenzhen JM Investment Management.
Addressing the supply-demand imbalance will also require measures to reflate the economy by boosting consumption – a tall order the government has struggled to deliver on.
For now, investors seem hopeful that a bigger supply-side reform is in the offing. Morgan Stanley strategists said sentiment has improved with the government's message, and added they now prefer A-shares over offshore ones.
'When senior policymakers change some policy tone, there should be some actionable items or something to follow through,' said Louisa Fok, China equity strategist with Bank of Singapore. It will not be a quick overnight fix, but it is 'definitely positive' that the government is aware of the problems, she added. Bloomberg
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Oil edges higher after EU new sanctions on Russia
Oil edges higher after EU new sanctions on Russia

CNA

timean hour ago

  • CNA

Oil edges higher after EU new sanctions on Russia

LONDON :Oil prices edged higher on Friday, heading for a small weekly loss, as investors weighed new European Union sanctions against Russia. Brent crude futures climbed 50 cents, or 0.72 per cent, to $70.02 a barrel as of 0912 GMT, U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures gained 61 cents, or 0.9 per cent, to $68.15 a barrel. At those levels, the contracts were headed for a marginal weekly loss of 0.5 per cent and 0.4 per cent respectively. Investors mulled the potential impact on global oil balances of the EU's agreement on an 18th sanctions package against Russia over its war in Ukraine, which includes measures aimed at dealing further blows to Russia's oil and energy industries. Its latest sanctions package will lower the G7's price cap for buying Russian crude oil to $47.6 per barrel, diplomats told Reuters. "Neither the price cap for Russian oil nor adding shadow fleet tankers on a sanction list managed to disrupt Russian oil exports so far, so the market remains sceptical of the impact of the latest sanctions," UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo said. Investors are awaiting news from the U.S. on possible further sanctions, after President Donald Trump earlier this week threatened sanctions on buyers of Russian exports unless Moscow agrees a peace deal in 50 days. "Ultimately, it is now a matter of waiting for possible major changes in U.S. sanctions and tariff policy," Commerzbank analysts said in a note. Four days of drone attacks on oilfields in Iraqi Kurdistan that shut down half the region's output have supported prices, pushing both contracts up by $1 on Thursday. The attacks "are bound to take their toll as the region's output has been slashed from 280,000 bpd to around 130,000 barrels per day," said PVM analyst Tamas Varga. Officials pointed to Iran-backed militias as the likely source of attacks this week on the region's oilfields, although no group has claimed responsibility.

Taiwan will not provoke confrontation with China; does not seek conflict, Asia News
Taiwan will not provoke confrontation with China; does not seek conflict, Asia News

AsiaOne

time2 hours ago

  • AsiaOne

Taiwan will not provoke confrontation with China; does not seek conflict, Asia News

TAIPEI — Taiwan does not seek conflict with China and will not provoke confrontation, but Beijing's "aggressive" military posturing was counterproductive, Vice President Hsiao Bi-khim said on Friday (July 18). China considers democratic Taiwan as part of its own territory and calls President Lai Ching-te a "separatist". Taiwan's government disputes China's claim. Speaking to the Taiwan Foreign Correspondents' Club in the capital Taipei, Hsiao said that Chinese pressure on Taiwan had only escalated over the past few years but that the island's people were peace-loving. "We do not seek conflict; we will not provoke confrontation," she said, reiterating Lai's offer of talks between Taipei and Beijing. For decades, Taiwan's people and business have contributed to China's growth and prosperity, which has only been possible under a peaceful and stable environment, Hsiao added. "Aggressive military posturing is counterproductive and deprives the people on both sides of the Taiwan Strait of opportunities to pursue an agenda of growth and prosperity," she said. "Defending the status quo (with China) is our choice, not because it is easy, but because it is responsible and consistent with the interests of our entire region." Taiwan, a major semiconductor producer, is facing another international challenge at the moment — tariff talks with the United States. Taiwan remains in negotiations with Washington, following US President Donald Trump's April announcement that the island would be subject to a 32 per cent tariff, which was subsequently suspended to facilitate talks. "With the United States, our negotiators are literally working around the clock to strive to reach an agreement on reciprocal tariffs to achieve trade balance while also promoting further bilateral co-operation in technology, investments and other areas," Hsiao said. [[nid:719886]]

HSBC disbands team focused on managing geopolitical risks
HSBC disbands team focused on managing geopolitical risks

Business Times

time2 hours ago

  • Business Times

HSBC disbands team focused on managing geopolitical risks

[LONDON] HSBC Holdings is disbanding a team of staffers that were focused on identifying and managing geopolitical risk even as the possibility of such threats has ratcheted up since US President Donald Trump returned to power. The move will impact fewer than 10 roles across Asia, Europe and other regions, according to people familiar with the matter. Some of those staffers have been given the opportunity to apply for other jobs within the lender, they said, asking not to be identified discussing personnel information. The London-headquartered firm is the world's largest trade bank and an anchor of commerce between the Asia-Pacific region and the rest of the world. As the largest non-US clearer of US dollars, it has become highly sensitive to the political jostling between Washington and Beijing, who have engaged in a tit-for-tat trade war this year prior to a truce that has appeared to stabilise ties for the moment. The firm's geopolitical team was responsible for helping top HSBC managers identify risks in countries the company has a presence in, people familiar with the matter said. Some in the team also advised clients at times, they said. 'We continue to focus on supporting our clients as they navigate a complex and fast-moving international environment,' according to a statement from HSBC. Fast-changing geopolitics have weighed on banks' results in recent months. Investment-banking revenue at the five biggest Wall Street lenders is still almost 40 per cent below the 2021 peak as that uncertainty weighed on merger and IPO volumes. Some rivals have sought to seize on the trend. JPMorgan Chase debuted a Center for Geopolitics in May to offer clients advice on everything from 'the new Middle East chessboard' to 'the endgame in the Russia-Ukraine war,' according to a statement at the time. Goldman Sachs Group and Lazard also offer clients advice on the topic. The HSBC move comes as Wells Fargo suspended travel to China after one of its top trade financing bankers was blocked from leaving the country, the latest case of authorities imposing exit bans on staff of foreign firms. The disbanding of HSBC's team is the latest change under chief executive officer Georges Elhedery, who has been pushing through a sweeping overhaul of Europe's largest lender ever since he took the reins last year in order to curb costs. BLOOMBERG

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store