Investment Strategies
US Investment Titan Gets Cold Feet Over China – Report

A long-running investor into China has taken time out to reassess what's going on in the country following President's Xi's re-election at the recent party congress.
  Tiger
  Global Management, which oversees $125 billion in assets, is
  pausing its investments in Chinese equities because the firm is
  assessing whether putting money into the Asian country is wise
  after President Xi Jinping consolidated his power, according to
  the Wall Street Journal. The paper quoted unnamed
  sources.
  
  Tiger executives, including founder Charles “Chase” Coleman, have
  told others that Xi’s re-election and his stacking the Communist
  Party’s leadership with loyalists at the recent party Congress
  could increase geopolitical tensions and meaning that the
  country’s zero-Covid policy is likely to continue, the people are
  quoted as saying. 
  
  The Chinese economy has been hit by Beijing’s zero-Covid policy
  and last year’s clampdown on a number of sectors, including
  technology and areas such as for-profit/after-hours schooling.
  The real estate sector is a worry – given its share of GDP –
  because of heavy debt exposures, as shown by 
  the default of property developer Evergrande, for example.
  Beijing’s oft-stated desire to re-take Taiwan, its security
  crackdown on Hong Kong, alleged mass theft of intellectual
  property and encroachments into the South China Sea have also put
  it at odds with the West. President Joe Biden’s administration
  has also restricted exports of silicon chip tech to China.
  Another worry is that in the longer term, China faces a declining
  population problem as the consequences of the now-defunct “One
  Child” policy are being realised.
  
  The MSCI China Index has slumped by 40.7 per cent since the start
  of January (in dollars); the MSCI Overseas China Index (in
  dollars) has crashed by 36 per cent.
  
  The WSJ said that Tiger has reduced its hedge fund’s
  China exposure to the mid-single digits heading into the Chinese
  Communist Party’s recent congress. As a result, Tiger was able to
  avoid some of the market fallout following Xi’s
  re-election. The firm didn’t buy into the steep selloff.
  
  Other US investment houses continue to push into China,
  notwithstanding concerns. Last September, for example,
  BlackRock raised
  about $1 billion for the first-ever mutual fund solely run by
  a foreign firm which is allowed to sell to Chinese
  individuals. Fidelity International was granted preliminary
  approval in August 2021. 
George Soros, the famed hedge fund tycoon, last year wrote in the WSJ that BlackRock’s push into the Chinese market was a “tragic mistake.”