Wealth Strategies
RBC Wealth Management Cuts Asia Ex-Japan Exposure On China Worries

Another wealth management house cuts its exposures to the Asia (excluding Japan) equity area as a result of concerns about China's regulatory crackdown on specific sectors, such as fintech and for-profit education.
RBC
Wealth Management has cut its weightings on Asia ex-Japan
equities to “market weight” from “overweight,” citing China’s
regulatory crackdown on sectors such as for-profit education and
fintech as a reason for acting. The firm's move chimes with
similar actions taken by wealth managers
such as Pictet.
The suddenness of Beijing’s moves have rattled global investors,
hitting stocks in a variety of sectors. (This publication has
also written about the issues
here and
here.)
“The combination of Chinese regulatory zeal and the increased
threat from the delta variant has led us to reduce our
longstanding recommended allocation to Asia ex-Japan equities to
market weight from overweight,” RBC Wealth Management said in a
note. “We believe this is an appropriate stance given valuations
have come down and are below historical averages. The MSCI China
Index is currently trading at 13.9x the 2021 consensus earnings
estimate versus its five-year average of 15.7x, while the MSCI AC
Asia ex Japan Index is at 14.5x current year earnings versus its
five-year average of 16.2x.”
The Canada-based firm said it is waiting for a number of positive
signals before turning more upbeat on China: major fintech
companies fully complying with regulatory requirements; Chinese
companies resuming their onshore and offshore IPO plans; major
digital platforms announcing measures to improve social benefits
for workers; and tech companies opening up their systems or
services to each other.
“Over the past few months, a whirlwind of regulatory changes has
swept across the business and investment landscape in China,
putting pressure on Chinese equities. China’s get-tough approach
appears to be the new normal given the regulators’ overarching
socio-economic aims,” the firm said.
China has been tightening the screws on specific sectors for
months. In April, China’s Ministry of Industry and Information
Technology announced that it would take measures to stabilise
commodities prices, crack down on speculation, and encourage
smelters and fabricators to hedge on futures markets. Regulators
also issued provisions to bring fintech companies firmly into the
fold. This led Ant Group, Alibaba’s fintech group, to announce
that it will restructure as a financial holding company to ensure
that its financial-related businesses are fully regulated.
China is trying to cut family living costs, in particular heavy
education costs - a big concern at a time when Beijing is trying
to encourage couples to have more children – reversing the
long-standing and controversial “one-child” policy.
Chinese authorities recently barred after-school tutoring
companies from making a profit. The education industry in China
is “massive”, RBC WM said, with revenues reaching $120 billion,
as children compete fiercely to get into good schools and are
heavily tutored at an exorbitant cost to parents.
“This has created a headache for China, which is facing the
demographic challenge of a rapidly ageing population following
its decades-long one-child policy. The steep education costs are
making the Chinese hesitant to embrace the newly-relaxed rules
that encourage three children per family,” the firm said.