China Strategy - Assessing the impact of power shortage
More provinces have implemented power cuts, impacting manufacturing production hubs provinces.
The power shortage is a result of a combination of strong power demand, power shortage, a subdued hydro power production and a campaign-style effort in meeting year-end energy intensity reduction, i.e., the “Dual Control” targets.
As the peak winter season for power consumption is approaching, senior government officials like Premier Li and Vice Premier Han have ensured sufficient electricity supply.
The NDRC announced key measures to address power shortage. As there will be time lag in increasing coal supply, we believe power rationing will persist in the next few months.
We believe an inflection point in policy fine tuning could be approaching, which should aim at preventing downside risks to growth, in light of power shortage and weakening of the latest official manufacturing Purchasing Manager Indices.
We will monitor key dates in October and November so as to gauge implementation and clarity on government stance, i.e., in mid-October when 3Q21 GDP will be announced, and in November when the Sixth Party Plenum will be held.
Over the past month, the onshore A-share CSI300 Index continued to outperform the offshore Chinese equities (i.e., MSCI China) and Hang Seng Index by more than 8ppt.
Given the significant relative outperformance, we are unwinding our relative preference to the onshore A-share market due to
i) potential profit taking and
ii) the power shortage will affect companies in both the onshore and offshore Chinese equities markets.
A prolonged power shortage could add further pressure on earnings downward revision.
We would monitor whether power shortage issue would be addressed or eased after the end-September evaluation.
Consensus is forecasting 16% y/y earnings growth for both MSCI China and CSI300 Index in 2022e and we believe the risks to earnings growth are skewed to the downside if power shortage persists longer-than-expected, triggering the knock-on effect from upstream to downstream sectors.
We maintain our cautious stance on industries with policy headwinds. We recommend investors to adopt a barbell strategy - for defensive quality plays that are align with policy priorities (which should hold up better as earnings downward revisions start to come under pressure), and HK financials (which can benefit from the higher interest rate environment and the Greater Bay Area Wealth Connect).
The current power shortage should support selective materials where supply tightness outweighs softening demand, such as aluminum, cement and steel.
It also reiterates our preference for the renewables, which we view carbon neutrality offers a multi-year investment theme.
Aside from the pure renewables plays, selected China Big Three Oil Majors should benefit from exposure to renewables and rising oil price, such as Sinopec.
Source: OCBC