Wealth Strategies
Pictet AM Cuts China Exposure After Beijing's Regulatory Crackdowns

The risk of holding Chinese assets has risen since the country moved against for-profit, after-school education firms and went after a number of other sectors, the Swiss firm said.
Pictet Asset Management, part of Swiss bank Pictet, has cut exposure to
Chinese equities following Beijing’s regulatory crackdown on the
for-profit education system in the country and moves against
other sectors, policies that have pushed up risks to holding
assets in the world’s second-largest economy.
The firm has also turned bullish on European equities, citing
improving vaccine rollouts, while it is underweight US stocks,
saying that they are expensively priced.
“We feel justified in taking profits in Chinese bonds, which have
performed strongly year-to-date,” Luca Paolini, chief strategist,
Pictet Asset Management, said.
In a note updating clients on Pictet’s asset allocation policy,
Paolini said the Chinese government’s surprise ban on for-profit
after-school tutoring, essentially shutting down the circa $100
billion “edtech” sector, has raised concerns about an
intensification of Beijing's regulatory crackdowns. The latest
intervention comes on the heels of cybersecurity investigations
of the ride hailing app DiDi and other e-commerce companies,
increased scrutiny of overseas IPOs and the imposition of fines
and restrictions on some of China's largest e-commerce firms.
(This publication has also written about the issues
here and
here.)
"However, we don’t think a full-scale withdrawal from Chinese
stocks is warranted. The PBOC recently lowered reserve
requirements for domestic banks and hinted at a potential shift
in favour of looser monetary policy to lower the cost of
servicing debt and support growth, which should underpin risky
assets in the medium term."
Beijing has also restricted the use of the variable interest
entities structure – holding companies based in tax haven
jurisdictions, designed to allow foreign investors to invest in
key sectors such as tech without giving them any operational
control.
The moves by China, which wrongfooted investors, hammered equities more than a week ago, raising questions about whether the Chinese authorities are aware, or care, about how such policy moves might hit investors. Ironically, the country has continued to push various schemes such as its Hong Kong mainlaind stock market links, various foreign investor quota regimes and capital programmes to bring capital into the country.
Taking a positive view
"A positive reading of such developments is that they are a
belated response to innovation and the breakneck growth of
industries that flourished in the absence of a regulatory
framework. Even though such moves would in effect add a permanent
'risk premium' to Chinese stocks and bonds, they should not
fundamentally change China’s growth model or the broader
investment case for the country's financial assets,” Paolini
said.
Pictet AM said it is keeping to a neutral allocation across
equities, bonds and cash; it favours assets that benefit from
stronger economic potential, such as European stocks.
Turning to the US, Paolini said US equities look expensive, with
a price-to-earnings ratio of 21.5 times based on 12-month forward
earnings. “[This] can only be sustained if trend growth is
unchanged, profit margins are stable at high levels and bond
yields stay low. So far, the recovery in US earnings has been in
line with GDP, and we think further upside to this year’s
corporate profit growth is unlikely in the absence of an upward
revision to US GDP growth forecasts,” he said.
European allure
More positively, Paolini said that European equities look a more
attractive prospect because a “smooth” vaccine rollout allows
governments to lift lockdowns.
“The region is now taking the lead in the recovery from the COVID
crisis from the US, with business activity across the region
expanding at its fastest rate in 21 years and mobility indicators
having already returned to pre-COVID levels,” he said. “For these
reasons, we upgrade the eurozone to overweight.”
Pictet is also turning overweight of its home market’s equities.
“We also upgrade Swiss equities to overweight. Swiss equity
markets are home to many quality stocks, which tend to perform
well during the middle phase of a bull market cycle,” Paolini
said.
The firm’s investment models show a “buy” signal for UK stocks.
“It is a market with a high dividend yield of 4.2 per cent, more
than double the global average, and is also attractively valued
on other valuation metrics,” he said.
Pictet is staying neutral on Japan, saying that economic data is
“disappointing and the pace of vaccinations is slower than other
major economies.”
The firm has taken profits on US Treasuries after a strong rally
in the market, and the Swiss firm has cut its position to neutral
from underweight. Pictet has taken a similar move on Chinese
government debt, cutting its exposure slightly, although
remaining an overweight position.