What Could Turn China Around?

Japanese officials have communicated policy changes to the markets effectively. Most recently with last week's rate hike by the Bank of Japan, which helped the country maintain its place as the world's strongest-performing stock market in 2024 through March 22, 2024, as measured by the Nikkei 225 Index. India has also been transparent in its policy initiatives, maintaining its place as the world's strongest-performing economy in 2024 according to global ratings agency Moody's. India's economic growth accelerated to 8.4% year-on-year in the fourth quarter of 2023, the third consecutive quarter of growth over 8%. Among Asia's biggest three economies the exception to this policy clarity is China, where the stock market is among the weakest and the economy remains under pressure.

One of the big challenges for investors is policy changes, which tended to have a big impact on China's economy in recent years. Policies including zero-COVID rules, the crackdown on big tech companies, and restrictions on leverage at property developers have seemed to come with no warning and little clarity. Much of the recent pressure on China's stock market began in 2020, concurrent with a new government policy restriction on the property market to crackdown on the buildup of leverage in the industry and curb housing speculation. The result starved developers of capital.

Recent measures to revive the Chinese economy have been a slow drip of policies, that have been ineffective and seen by markets as reactive, uncoordinated, and targeted rather than prompt and broad. They have not been sufficient to support a sustainable turnaround in consumer confidence, which remains low due to weakness in their biggest asset: property.

China's consumer confidence remains pinned to lows

China's consumer confidence remains pinned to lows

Source: Charles Schwab, Bloomberg data as of 3/21/2024.

While China's stocks have bounced higher since their multi-year low on January 22, with the MSCI China Index rising 13% through March 21, 2024, sentiment remains pessimistic. China's stocks are flat so far in 2024 and valuations are in line with 20-year lows, as you can see in the chart below. There have been some green shoots, with better-than-expected export growth in the combined January-February data, supported by the global manufacturing recovery we believe has started. However, China's economic growth is likely to remain muted due to the weight of the property market slowdown and modest fiscal support. While policymakers around the world are looking at rate cuts to stimulate growth, high interest rates have not been what ails China's economy—it's weak consumer, business, and investor confidence. There are also the trade risks we covered recently in our take on the impact of the 2024 elections.

China's stocks valuation at low end of range

China's stocks valuation at low end of range

Source: Charles Schwab, MSCI, FactSet data as of 3/21/2024.