Investment Strategies
China's Exports Can Continue Driving GDP, Real Estate Loses Prominence – EdR

A challenge for China has arguably been unsustainable property sector growth and the ensuing hangover of unsold units and bad debt. A new paper from a European bank notes that the sector isn't as important, relatively, as it used to be. The question is how resilient exports can be in an increasingly restrictive world.
For investors fretting that oversupply in Chinese real estate and
related malinvestment is a threat to the Asian giant, a report
noting that property now accounts for far less of the economic
pie than before the pandemic will offer reassurance.
In a paper from Edmond de
Rothschild, Fang Liu, Asian economist at the European
private banking firm, said that real estate has powered China for
much of the past two decades, but growth in the economy has
remained “remarkably resilient” even as property markets have
gone into a “prolonged structural downturn.”
Fang Liu said that in an early 2024 paper, the firm bank had
already seen that the “new economy” of technology and modern
manufacturing had become a new growth engine for the
country. Further, real estate has, in terms of a contribution to
broader GDP, fallen from around 30 per cent in 2019 to around 18
per cent.
China’s exports, which have contributed to 30 per cent of
the Chinese growth, keep hitting new highs despite global
headwinds, the economist's report, which seeks to measure
the effect of Western tariff/non-tariff barriers, said. “They
have shifted from low-cost goods to higher-value, technologically
sophisticated products, making them more complex and harder to
replace.”
Gross domestic product was forecast to have grown 4.5 per cent
year-on-year in April to June, cooling from 5.0 per cent in the
first quarter, a Reuters poll of 54 economists showed on
13 July. For 2026, China’s GDP growth is forecast to cool to 4.6
per cent from 5.0 per cent in 2025, before easing further to 4.4
per cent in 2027.
Policymakers in Beijing are keen for the country to reduce
reliance on real estate – a sector riven with debt concerns and
worries about unsold homes today – to pivot towards a new
development model.
There is more data showing that the EdR observations in 2024
about the shift from real estate as a major driver of GDP, Fang
Lui said.
“The evidence accumulated over the past two years has
strengthened rather than weakened this conclusion. Production of
electric vehicles, industrial robots, batteries and
semiconductors continues to expand rapidly. High-tech
manufacturing industrial value added with an average 15 per cent
growth rate has consistently outperformed the rest of the
economy,” the economist said. “Rather than representing a
temporary policy-driven recovery, these developments point to a
deeper shift in the sources of China’s long-term growth.”
Divergences
At HSBC Private Bank and Premier Wealth, Patrick Ho, chief
investment officer for North Asia, sees a “K-shaped bifurcation
of the Chinese economy.” The observation also plays into the
diverging performance of China’s economic sectors.
“The upper arm of the K – AI compute, semiconductors, and
advanced equipment and hardware – is expanding rapidly,
fuelled by policy support, export-driven demand and domestic
substitution. The lower arm – consumption, property, and
discretionary spending – remains structurally impaired.
According to economic activity data in May, the two arms have
diverged even further,” Ho wrote.
Since the start of 2026, the performance gap between China’s
A-shares (+8.4 per cent) and the MSCI China Index (-15.5 per
cent) or Hang Seng Index (-10.0 per cent) is striking and the gap
is even wider in tech. Year-to-date, the ChiNext Index – a
Nasdaq-style board on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange – recorded 36.5
per cent return versus the Hang Seng Tech’s -20.1 per cent
slide.
Real estate woes
A desire to reduce real estate’s importance as a growth engine is
understandable. The picture presented by Atlantic Council, in a
28 January note from Jeremy Mark, was bleak: “China’s real estate
slump is in its fifth year, with no end in sight. Key indicators
– sales, prices, construction starts and completions
– continue to slide, while an estimated 80 million
unsold or vacant homes clog the market.
“Many of the country’s largest private developers have defaulted
on debts, and one of the largest state-backed firms, China Vanke
Co, has been struggling for months to stave off a similar fate.
One Chinese economist estimates that as many as 80 per cent of
developers and construction firms could 'exit the market’ in the
coming years as the industry permanently contracts,” Mark
wrote.
The Atlantic Council paper noted that real estate has been the
primary repository of life savings for hundreds of millions of
Chinese households. Citing Australia’s Macquarie Group, it said
about 85 per cent of the price gains that underpinned that wealth
creation have evaporated since 2021, when the government
tightened credit restrictions rein in a property bubble. Several
major China developers have defaulted, such as China Evergrande
Group and China South City Holdings Ltd.
In its paper, Edmond de Rothschild said an important element of
the China exports story is the higher value-add nature of this
side of the economy.
“While net exports have decreased as a share of GDP (from 8 per
cent in 2008 to 4 per cent today), their contribution to growth
has increased significantly (from around 0 per cent pre-Covid to
over 30 per cent today) in recent years,” Fang Lui
added.
The bank concluded by arguing that although protectionist
policies against China are a challenge, they will not
decisively damage its export sector.
“More importantly, China’s exports are no longer competing on the
same basis as two decades ago. Industrial upgrading has increased
domestic value added, technological sophistication and the
complexity of manufactured exports, making Chinese products
increasingly difficult to substitute,” it said. “The
sustainability of China’s export engine will ultimately depend
not on the pace of global protectionism, but on whether China’s
industrial upgrading continues to outpace it. Our analysis
suggests that it will.”