by winston » Tue May 13, 2025 2:51 pm
China Strategy: Faster-than-expected trade de-escalation
Key highlights:
Effective tariff rate on China will be lowered to around 40%, which comprises of
i) the inherited effective tariff rate of about 11% since Trump 1.0 that continued through Biden’s administration;
ii) the 20% fentanyl tariff; and
iii) the 10% reciprocal tariff, which is similar to those being imposed on other countries
China will lower its recent tariffs on US imports to 10% from 125%, making the overall new effective tariff rate on the US at around 28%
Establishing a mechanism to continue discussions about economic and trade relations” which will be led by China Vice Premier He Lifeng, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer
The joint statements did not mention several issues, such as the fentanyl tariffs, export controls, purchase agreement and the TikTok deal, which we believe these would be key issues to monitor for future discussions.
The latest development should be viewed as trade truce and the path to reach a deal would remain bumpy and lengthy, akin to Trump 1.0 trade negotiations.
US Treasury Bessent also mentioned that it could take "two to three years" to reach a full agreement.
In addition, the trade de-escalation and the larger-than-expected rollback in tariffs is likely to lower the urgency of rolling out stimulus measures and would allow China policymakers to take time in assessing the economic situation before rollout additional stimulus. Markets have previously anticipated an additional CNY1-1.5t fiscal support in 2H25.
Hang Seng Index (HSI), MSCI China Index and CSI 300 Index rose 3.0%, 3.4% and 1.2% respectively yesterday. We remain constructive on Chinese equities on the back of trade de-escalation with attractive valuations and low positioning among institutional investors.
The MSCI China Index and CSI 300 Index are trading at 10.2x and 11.9x forward price-to-earnings (P/E), implying -0.6s.d. and -0.2s.d. to historical average, whereas HSI is trading at historical average of 9.8x forward P/E. Also, the MSCI China Index is trading at 10% valuation discount to MSCI Emerging Market (MSCI EM) Index.
Positioning among institutional investors is still relatively light with global emerging market funds underweighting China by about 2.5%, representing the largest underweight among countries.
Our HSI index target under a base / bull / bear case is at 24,800 / 26,400 / 19,800 respectively.
We prefer offshore Chinese equities in the near-term on the back of trade de-escalation. We reiterate a barbell strategy given trade negotiations remain bumpy and lengthy; we expect a near term rotation to growth and high beta stocks during periods of trade truce and de-escalations of trade tensions.
We maintain our preference on quality yield stocks despite the pullback potential but we believe it offers opportunities to accumulate especially for income-oriented investors.
We maintain our preference for the three investment themes.
First, internet and platform companies, which are the proxies of China market given their large index weight, accounting for close to one-third of the market index weight.
Large-cap internet and platform companies will start reporting quarterly results this week and the key focus would be the pace of artificial intelligence (AI) adoption and commercialisation.
We prefer Alibaba (9988 HK) and Tencent (700 HK) as core holdings. JD.com (9618 HK) has the most attractive valuation among its peers as it also has the highest uncertainty in terms of earnings outlook owing to its higher-than-expected investment in food delivery. The stock is trading close to trough valuations of 7.2x forward P/E and is likely to have a rebound, but we will look for more clarity at its 1Q25 results announcement today (13 May) on potential earnings drag to gauge the extent of re-rating potential.
Second, policy beneficiaries focusing on domestic consumption and technology innovation. For details on consumption, please refer to the report “China Consumption: Better-than-expected Labour Day holiday data”.
Third, we remain our preference for quality yield stocks to cushion market volatility during tariff negotiations and can benefit from the potential incremental fund inflow by state-owned insurers and mutual funds. Despite recent yield compression, the yield spread remains attractive with China Government bond yields hovering at around 1.6%. In addition, share prices of stocks and industries that have sizeable US exposure are likely to see a relief rebound given they have been under pressure when US-China trade tension was elevated.
Source: OCBC
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