Investment Strategies
China's Not Turning Inwards – At Least For Now
Matthews Asia, the US-based investment firm with a strong Asia focus, discusses some of the fears that China might turn inwards and try to row back from a process of globalisation.
The following analysis of economic and investment events is
from San Francisco-based fund management house Matthews Asia. China
remains very much in focus with it’s “zero-Covid” policies –
leading to lockdowns of major cities such as Shanghai – along
with concerns about its real estate market and Beijing’s
crackdown on sectors such as tech. The world’s second-largest
economy is one of the great “workshops” of modern commerce;
disruptions to supply chains since the pandemic erupted have
caused worldwide problems. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was
closely watched not least because of how events might be
interpreted in China, a country that has grown closer to Russia
in certain ways, such as over energy, and arguably, a desire
to dethrone the US dollar as the world’s main reserve
currency.
To chew through some of this is Robert Horrocks, chief investment
officer at Matthews Asia. The editors at this news service are
pleased to share these views and invite replies. As ever,
editorial disclaimers apply. To jump into debate, email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is clearly straining China’s
relations with the West. What is less clear is what the
implications of this will be for China’s trade and economic
policies and, by extension, on the development and interactions
of Asia’s markets. These are common questions that I get from
investors these days and they are hard to answer without a great
deal of speculation. However, there are some trends that are
already in place and the conflict in the Ukraine
might accelerate some of these trends.
First, China has been searching for more self-sufficiency and its
“dual circulation” strategy is all about increasing
self-sufficiency whilst remaining part of global markets. Things
like self-sufficiency in food are going to be impossible to
achieve as China has little arable land relative to its
population. Relying on food imports means that it needs to retain
good relations with the US and Russia. Southeast Asia could also
be a source of food and agricultural imports from Africa may
continue to increase. So, the One Belt One Road initiative that
seeks to increase economic ties and transportation routes through
Southeast Asia and to Europe and the East coast of Africa is an
important part of their economic diplomacy, particularly if the
relationship with the US sours further.
China wants also to be self-sufficient in technology. Now that is
hard to do when China is almost entirely reliant on the outside
world for semiconductors – the building blocks of hardware. Even
the equipment bought by China’s suppliers of semiconductors to
make the chips is predominantly made by the US and European Union
(EU) countries. This reliance leaves China with a need for huge
investment at home in the factories needed to make the chips but
also the intermediate goods and raw materials required to be able
to manufacture at home. This is a long-term project and surely
the invasion of the Ukraine comes at an inopportune time for
China as relations with the West are strained even as it is just
embarking on this initiative.
Finally, there is the need for financial self-sufficiency. The
threat of sanctions with the US and the potential for being
locked out of the US dollar trading system means that China has
been eager to set up its own renminbi (RMB)-based payments
systems and to try and internationalise its treasury market.
This is all part of a desire to have long-term financial
interrelations through the RMB, much as the US does with the
dollar. It has had some success attracting investment from the EU
and more latterly (and more significantly) Russia. Also, pricing
of oil in RMB. But these are still early steps – the system is
still nascent. However, as we know with the experience of the
dollar post World War One, things can change rapidly.
An inward pivot?
Do these trends mean that China is turning inwards and moving
away from globalisation? I think it would be a mistake to look at
it that way. China sees these goals as a response to provocation
from the US. The imposition of trade tariffs from the recent
administration and the West’s consternation at advances in
Chinese technology is an example.
However, transitions in China’s economy, too, mean that it will
continue to rely on cooperation with other countries to maintain
economic progress. The ageing and shrinking of its workforce
means that it will continue to relocate some of its industrial
base outside its borders – Southeast Asia a major beneficiary but
also parts of Latin America and maybe Eastern Europe, too. It
will enable China to make use of younger and cheaper workforces
abroad whilst its own population focuses more on higher-end
manufacturing and services jobs.
These trends also argue for a greater role from government. Tax
and spend China knows the value of a capitalist economy to
create wealth, but it will also have a need for government to
continue to build up the physical infrastructure of its economic
diplomacy. Whilst it does so, it will continue to spend more
heavily on the production and utilisation in service sectors of
IT capital to support productivity growth at home.
In addition, China will continue to spend to deal with “developed
economy” issues that arise from having largely solved the problem
of extreme poverty. That is to say: “How do we achieve a more
equal share in consumption? A better quality of life and
environment? Prevent monopolistic corporate power?
The list is familiar to any Western government. China is
struggling with how to achieve these aims and with how it can
better support public discussion and involvement in the debate,
without springing surprises on the capital markets.
What about the markets?
China does not want to spook the capital markets because it sees
them as important for maintaining the highest possible levels of
return on investment. As investment share in GDP gradually
declines towards more developed economy levels, achieving better
pricing and use of capital will be crucial in maintaining the
rates of productivity growth needed to maintain the fast pace of
wage growth that has cemented the Party’s legitimacy in the eyes
of the Chinese population.
In my view this has several implications for the markets. Whilst
this is certainly not anti-globalisation, it does suggest that
the overall quality of China’s domestic A share market is set to
improve gradually. Also, the domestic market will be more
influenced by local monetary policy, local sentiment and the
local financial system. Perhaps it will be less correlated with
global markets and less susceptible to the shocks of the US
dollar system. We have long thought that China was on the way to
becoming its own asset class – perhaps recent events may
accelerate this.
However, even if the world were to split into two spheres of
influence – one around the US and one around China – China is not
interested in retreating into its shell. So, there will still be
a process of “globalisation” within the Chinese sphere of
influence at least and this must be positive for the countries of
Southeast Asia as they are able to build up their manufacturing
base, their infrastructure and maintain fast rates of wage growth
to support consumption.
This will have the added advantage for China of helping it clean
up its environment at home. However, this is another long-term
project – the scale of the manufacturing capital stock in China
is huge relative to these nations’ GDPs.
These trends suggest that consumption markets around Asia will
continue to grow. That China will favour technology spending and
will have a lighter regulatory touch on areas of the greatest
innovation and research and development expense. That it will
seek to promote and support businesses that offer at the lowest
cost access to, for example, healthcare. That there will be
growing markets for healthcare of convenience rather than
survival (orthopaedics is one example.)
And there will be continued regulatory costs around pollution and
other issues such as equal access to education and financial
speculation in real assets that are seen as antithetical to
China’s mandate of Common Prosperity – the drive to narrow the
wealth gap and strengthen and enlarge its middle class. But it is
a China that does want to work with its neighbours and the
capital markets to achieve these outcomes.
No doubt other markets will benefit in other ways. The US may
push to diversify its supply chains within its own sphere of
influence, to Mexico for example. India, a long-time ally of the
US and China sceptic, has had some recent success in building up
its own manufacturing in automobiles and smartphones. And there
remains the issue of Europe, where China had been making such
progress in its investment, economic and diplomatic outreach.
So the impact of Russia’s invasion of the Ukraine has indeed put
some of these relationships to the test – particularly concerning
must be the wariness of Europe. Given that China’s long-term
plans are many years away from realisation, there should be an
incentive for China to play a more constructive role in the
conflict. We shall see. However, as much as it feels that we have
somehow turned a corner and are heading down the path of a world
divided into two spheres of influence, it seems that this will
simply confirm trends in investment and opportunity that were
already in place.