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06 December 2016
China Market Strategy Hao Hong, CFA
Outlook 2017: High-Wire Act
Summary: It is hard to fathom a raging bull market amid tightening liquidity. China’s real interest rate has fallen to new lows
that used to portend interest rate or RRR hike. It has been the real culprit behind the bubble in bond, property and commodities,
as well as fast depreciating CNY. While inflation expectation is rising, growth may not eventuate, as investment will likely fall
with property curbs. As such, the Chinese economy is stuck between mild cyclical reflation and outright stagflation. It will
continue to traverse an L-shaped trajectory, as it has since 2012.
For now, more restrictive property curbs are chosen instead to deal with surging property prices. Consensus believes that such
moves will push funds from property to equities. But in the past, after each property curb, disappointing market performance,
or even plunge, ensued – as seen in September 2007, January 2010 and April 2011. Consensus has failed to recognize that
property transactions are indeed monetary multipliers, and can accelerate money velocity. As such, the curbs on property
transactions will cut liquidity, and become a drag on market performance.
If interest rates were to be kept stable to soothe the volatility during deleveraging, then CNY would have to bear the brunt of
economic adjustment. If capital control is instigated to slow down onshore CNY depreciation, then on/off-shore exchange rates
will diverge, obliging market interventions such as cutting offshore RMB supply and raising offshore RMB borrowing costs. But
higher interest rate offshore will eventually roil the other asset prices, such as equities. Something somewhere will have to bend
sometime – it is a high-wire act.
While bonds will likely underperform equities, how far equities can rise will depend on how fast equity valuation expands
relative to bond yield’s rise. In general, in a tightening liquidity environment, valuation multiple will compress. Contrary to
bullish consensus, our EYBY model estimates the likely trading range in 2017 for the Shanghai Composite to be 3300 +/- 500,
suggesting perhaps a better year than 2016 (the same model estimated 2900 +/- 400 for 2016 exactly twelve months ago) - but
with wider return dispersion to reflect rising volatility. Further, 2/3 of the estimates are lower than the current index level of
~3300. As such, we remain guarded. With the expanded connect scheme and a depreciating CNY, southbound flows should help
offset outflows from HK due to a strengthening Dollar to an extent.
2017 is destined to be a year of epic changes and volatility. We should focus on convexity trades with option-like payoff and
think in probabilistic scenarios, instead of being overly engrossed by the perpetual futile debate of bull vs. bear. We see a
strengthening Dollar, rising inflation and long bond yield, as well as a weakening CNY. In the first half, there should be
opportunities in financials, materials, energy, industrials, tech and consumer discretionary.
------------------------------
“To light a candle is to cast a shadow.” – Ursula K. Le Guin
A Rate Hike?
Funding cost volatility suppressed, leading to the “void of yield” and highly-leveraged trades: Primary funding cost, measured
by the 7-day repo rate that the PBoC prices its liquidity provision, has been kept steady since the burst of China’s stock market
bubble in June 2015. The supposed objective was to soothe volatility during systematic deleverage in equities. Funds have
subsequently rotated out of stocks into bonds. With stable funding costs, traders leveraged their positions to buy bonds in order
to earn a bigger carry. Over time, more and more funds flooded the bond market. As yield plunged, traders had to lengthen their
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portfolio duration and borrow extremely short to squeeze out an interest spread – till it disappears. At one stage, over 90% of
market borrowing was overnight.
Since the beginning of 2016, the gap between China’s 10-year treasury yield and the 7-day repo rate has narrowed consistently
for the longest stretch in history. Traders lamented “the void of yield”, as they added more leverage (please see our report
“Outlook 2016: the Chinese Curse” on December 9, 2015). In the end, this trade is like picking pennies in front of a bulldozer.
Recently, the 10-year yield has double-bottomed, and started to rise – especially after the US election, which appeared to have
wakened the inflation expectation globally (Focus Chart 1).
Focus Chart 1: The spread between 10-year and 7-day repo at its narrowest for the longest stretch in history.
Source: Bloomberg, Bank of Communications (Int’l)
Historic-low real interest rate feeds asset bubbles: China’s real interest rate, after adjusted for inflation in goods, services and
property prices, has fallen to its new low in history (Focus Chart 3). Such low rate has encouraged reckless risk taking, leading to
housing, bond and commodity bubbles. Recently, the PBoC has been gradually increasing the proportion of longer-dated repos
(Focus Chart 2). Such maneuvers are to discourage bond traders from excessively shortening the duration of their borrowing – a
precarious trade. Yet as property and commodity prices are surging relentlessly, real rates are falling faster than these
open-market tactics could catch up. A rate hike, or further curbs on property, or even both, would be necessary.
Focus Chart 2: Repo duration has been extended, but real interest rate is falling faster.
Source: Bloomberg, Bank of Communications (Int’l)
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
450
500
1/2/2005 23/10/2012 29/8/2013 2/4/2015 5/11/2015 26/2/2016 27/4/2016 7/7/2016 1/9/2016 3/11/2016
28d repo 逆回购
21d repo 逆回购
14d repo 逆回购
7d repo 逆回购
CNY bn 十亿元
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Already, we have seen a bout of new curbs issued on property purchases. These new measures to deflate the property bubble
include increasing the percentage of down payment, restrictions on second-home purchase, tightening lending standards to
those with outstanding mortgages and the requirement for buyers to have local “hukou” residency – as usual. So far, this latest
round of property curbs has not yet tamed the burgeoning bubble, and property prices continue surging (Focus Chart 3).
Focus Chart 3: Real interest rate has plunged to new low; property bubble binding monetary hands.
Source: Bloomberg, Bank of Communications (Int’l)
Property curbs tighten liquidity and will hurt equities – contrary to popular belief: Consensus believes that the curb on
property will “force” funds to rotate out of the property sector into stocks. We beg to differ. History suggests that property
curbs tend to be followed by declining market return, or even outright market downfall, as can be seen after September 2007,
January 2010, April 2010, January 2011 and February 2013 after property curbs were initiated (Focus Chart 4).
The reason for a falling market afterwards is palpable: property transactions tend to be a monetary multiplier, with the
newly-created credits associated with home loans. These transactions also accelerate monetary velocity with derivative
purchases of furniture and appliances after closing. As such, property curbs will indeed have a liquidity tightening effect –
contrary to popular belief. Such decline in liquidity offers a good explanation to the ensuing disappointing market return
historically.
Focus Chart 4: Property curbs tend to initiate a slowdown in sales, housing starts, investment, prices and stock market.
Source: Bloomberg, Bank of Communications (Int’l)
2013-02
2011-01
2010-01
2010-04
2009-10
2007-09
2006-05
2008-12
2014-09
2015-03
2016-10
(0.4)
(0.2)
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
1.2
07/2005 07/2006 07/2007 07/2008 07/2009 07/2010 07/2011 07/2012 07/2013 07/2014 07/2015 07/2016
-10%
-5%
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%Sales Y/Y
Start Y/Y
SHCOMP
Price Y/Y
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Long Bond Yields Will Rise, Concurrent with Inflation; Bond Bubble Set to Burst
Regardless, the market is already hiking rates with rising long yields, hurting leveraged bond positions: In our recent special
report “A Price Revolution” on November 14, 2016, we summarized our presentation on global asset allocation at the Westlake
Hedge Fund Summit, which was held one day before the historic US election. We believe that labor wage growth falling
consistently below labor productivity growth for more than three decades, or the exploitation of labor’s surplus value, is the
fundamental cause of persistently low inflation; and hence the secular bull market in bonds. Recently, labor wage growth has
started to outpace labor productivity growth, heralding the return of inflation and the end of the bond bubble (Focus Chart 5
and 6). Since our Westlake presentation on November 7, long yields globally have surged, led by the US 10-year treasury.
Focus Chart 5: US 10-year a history of surplus value exploitation; productivity gain is inadequately compensated
Source: Bloomberg, Bank of Communications (Int’l)
Focus Chart 6: “Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon”.
Source: Bloomberg, ECRI, Bank of Communications (Int’l)
Historically, long yields measured by China’s 10-year treasury, PPI, CPI, commodities, property and money supply have been
rising in tandem (Focus Chart 7). Increasing money supply should lead to higher inflation, and thus rising commodity prices and
yields. Yet since the start of 2016, inflation, commodity and property have all surged, concurrent with China’s narrow money
growth, except the 10-year yield. This is the longest stretch of time that the 10-year yield has fallen in its history (Focus Chart 7).
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Focus Chart 7: Commodities, property, PPI and money supply surging – 10y has just started.
Source: Bloomberg, Bank of Communications (Int’l)
That said, the 10-year has failed to fall below its historical lows twice, and has indeed started to rise above its long-term moving
average – a positive signal to short bonds from a trading perspective. Historically, whenever the 10-year rose above its
long-term moving average, it tended to form an uptrend that would last more than a couple of months (Focus Chart 8).
Focus Chart 8: China’s 10y has surged through its long-term average, after the longest fall in history.
Source: Bloomberg, Bank of Communications (Intl)
As such, even if the PBoC refuses to raise interest rate when confronted with asset bubbles and mounting inflation pressure,
market interest rates have been increasing to compensate for what is obviously missing, and should start to affect asset prices.
Even though the interest rate spread should begin to widen, the effect of rising long yields will be more pronounced on bond
prices, resulting in capital losses for many. It is not yet clear whether these losses could lead to margin calls and forced
liquidation of leveraged bond positions built on the losing premise of steady funding costs. Regardless, as tension in the bond
market builds, volatility is set to rise and will eventually spill.
Sacrificing the CNY?
If interest rate were to be kept steady, the CNY would have to depreciate to bear the brunt of adjustment: Recently, the CNY
has been depreciating rapidly towards 7, well past the range of 6.8-6.83 - where the last phase of CNY appreciation started in
2010. With a half-open capital account, rapidly plunging real rates with rising inflation pressure is a sure recipe for currency
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depreciation. Should it intensify, it would not be a surprise to see tighter control on cross-border capital flows to slow down
capital outflows induced by rapid CNY depreciation.
Even if the CNY could depreciate in a gradually isolated environment, the offshore CNH market still represents a challenge. The
on/off-shore RMB markets are influenced by similar but not entirely the same factors. If the pace of CNY depreciation is
managed, then the CNH will be under pressure to reflect the underlying economic fundamentals. And the on/off-shore exchange
rates will start to diverge further. Of course, the PBoC could intervene with restricted offshore CNH liquidity and by hiking
short-term RMB borrowing rate in the offshore market. But such acts will then cause the on/off-shore interest rates to diverge,
instead of the exchange rates. It will roil the offshore asset prices denominated in RMB whenever the pace of depreciation
between on/off-shore exchange rates diverges. Something, somewhere at some time must bend.
Falling FX reserve portends further depreciation pressure and capital outflow: Globally, the countries that historically have
been hoarding the most US dollars are seeing their FX reserve declining fast, except Japan. Saudi Arabia’s reserve is hurt by
falling oil prices. And the petrodollar, a form of liquidity that used to support the US treasury market and provide offshore US
dollar supply, is rapidly drying up. Meanwhile, China’s reserve has declined from four trillion US dollars to close to three trillion,
together with a depreciating CNY (Focus Chart 9).
Focus Chart 9: Global central banks’ international reserves falling; the CNY depreciating fast.
Source: Bloomberg, ECRI, Bank of Communications (Int’l)
The recent CNY depreciation has not caused market panics, contrary to last August and early this year. Consensus believes that
the CNY is reflecting the weakening economic fundamentals, and thus other asset prices will not have to adjust - similar to the
effect of a weakening JPY on the Japanese economy and market. This view is not entirely correct. The difference is that Japan
holds large investment positions overseas, whereas Chinese asset allocation is still largely RMB denominated. A depreciating JPY
will make Japan’s overseas investment more valuable, but not necessarily the CNY to China.
FX reserve accumulation has been the most important channel of money creation in China (Please see our report “The Most
Crowded Trade” on September 12, 2016). CNY depreciation will not affect stocks only if the PBoC is seen not intervening with
precious FX reserve. A discharge of FX reserve will mean tightening macro liquidity, if without other forms of liquidity
replenishment by the PBoC, such as the SLF and MLF. The exchange-rate reform is to let the market determine where the CNY
should trade, and it appears this objective is being achieved fast. The build-up in speculative long positions in the US dollar also
augurs for further US dollar strength, and thus, a weaker CNY (Focus Chart 10).
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Focus Chart 10: USD non-commercial net-long surging, portending further dollar strength, and weaker CNY.
Source: Bloomberg, Bank of Communications (Int’l)
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Bonds to Underperform Equities; Volatility Set to Rise
The Chinese economy is stuck between reflation and stagflation; L-shaped since 2012: Focus Chart 11 outlines different phases
in the economic cycle that China has navigated through since the recovery initiated in 2009. However, since 2012, the Chinese
economy appears to be stuck between reflation and stagflation, as highlighted in the red rectangle in Focus Chart 11. The path
that the Chinese economy has traversed since 2012 resembles the “L-shaped” growth phase that has been discussed by the
“Authoritative Figure”.
These two economic phases hold different implications for asset allocation. When in reflation, the economy tends to see falling
interest rates, and rising stock and commodity prices. But when in stagflation, falling FX reserve, tighter money and falling
property prices are more commonly observed. Recall in the past four years, China has indeed experienced all of these
phenomena, supporting our model conclusion empirically. Consequently, Chinese equities have been stuck in a wide trading
range, with bouts of volatility periodically.
Focus Chart 11: The Chinese economy L-shaped since 2012, and presents a dilemma to asset allocation.
Source: Bloomberg, Bank of Communications (Int’l)
Bonds set to underperform equities; look for convexity trades with quasi-option return: Our bond yield vs. earnings yield
model (EYBY model hereafter), which has helped us pinpoint the peak of China’s stock market bubble in June 2015 and
negotiate the rough waters after the bubble burst, started showing relative value of equities to bonds in June this year around
the Brexit period (Focus Chart 12).
05/‘16
03/'16
03/'15
12/'15
06/'15
09/'15
04/'15
01/'15 12/'14
10/'14
09/'14
09/'12
01/'14
12/'13
07/'13
06/'14
09/'13
01/'13
03/'14
12/'12 03/’12
02/‘12
01/’12
12/‘1111/’11
10/‘11
08/‘11 09/’11
07/’11
06/‘1105/’11
03/’11
01/’1112/‘10
11/’1010/‘10
09/’10
08/‘10
07/’10
05/’10
06/‘10
04/‘10
03/’10
01/‘10
12/’09
11/‘09
10/’09
09/‘09
08/’09
07/‘09
06/’09
05‘09
04/’09
03/‘09
09/'16
06/'16
04/'16
10/'16
(2.0)
(1.5)
(1.0)
(0.5)
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
(3.0) (2.5) (2.0) (1.5) (1.0) (0.5) 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0
Falling interest Rate
Recovery Overheat
tighter money
Falling Property Price
Rising Property Price
Rising Interest Rate
Falling Stock Price
Falling
Commodity
Price
Falling Forex ReserveRising Stock Price
Rising
Commodity
Price
Rising Forex Reserve
Easier Money
Low
Growth
11/‘14
1st interest rate
cut; Bull market
kicked off
04/‘11 CRB Index
peaked
10/’10
1st interest rate
raised
01/’10
1st RRR
raised
08/‘09
IPO re-opened
06/‘13
Interbank liquidity
crisis
11/‘15
Commodity rebound
12/‘10
2nd time RRR and
interest rate raised
Low
Inflation
"L shape" economy
High
Inflation
High
Growth
Reflation Stagflation
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That said, EYBY’s relative value saw a significantly higher peak in 2008 that eventually corresponded to the market bottom. The
local peaks in 2012, however, did not correspond to the eventual lows of the market. As equities’ relative value improved, the
rotation should progress gingerly, in tandem with market volatility.
The pace of how fast equities’ valuation can expand relative to the rise in bonds’ yield determines how far the stock indices can
rise, as funds rotate from bonds to equities. As liquidity conditions tighten and bond yield rises, it is likely that the market will be
increasingly unwilling to ascribe a higher valuation multiple for each unit of earnings. Or equity valuation may not be able to
expand fast enough to offset the rise in bond yield. As such, the outlook for Chinese equities will look much less sanguine than
many pundits are forecasting based on the false assumption of expanding liquidity conditions.
Focus Chart 12: Chinese equities showing relative value to bonds; rotation has begun.
Source: Bloomberg, Bank of Communications (Int’l)
The Shanghai Composite 2017 likely trading range = 2800-3800, with widely dispersing outcomes. In our report “Outlook 2016:
the Chinese Curse” on December 9, 2015, we applied our EYBY model to estimate the trading range for the Shanghai Composite.
This time last year, the relative value between equities and bonds had not yet completed its trend towards historical highs, and
was clearly set to do so. It made our job easier then. Our target range for the next twelve months set in last December was
2500-3300. As of writing, the Shanghai Composite has largely confined itself within the trading range of 2600-3300, after a
dramatic 1000-point plunge and circuit breaker meltdown that many failed to anticipate earlier this year. And it has been exactly
12 months.
In June, around the time of “Brexit”, our EYBY model has moved past its high point in recent years, and started to fall. We
believe its decline should continue, before settling in a range, as the history in 2010 or in 2014 suggests (Focus Chart 12,
highlighted in red rectangles). As the relative value trend is entering a range-bound phase without apparent direction, the exact
upper and lower bounds of this year’s range are more difficult to discern. As such, we have applied a sensitivity analysis based
on different levels of bond yield and various levels of relative valuation between bonds and equities to arrive at a likely trading
range (Table 1).
The historical average of relative valuation between bonds and equities was around 0.4. We believe the current level should
continue to fall towards its long-term historical average, before fluctuating within the range of +1/-1. Such moves should see the
Shanghai Composite trading at 2600-4000 – a very wide trading range. But as bond yield is likely to rise above 3%, relative
valuation should linger at the range below its long-term average, or from 0.4 to -1, implying a trading range of 2800-3800.
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Table 1: Shanghai Composite 2017 trading range = 2800-3800 (scenarios with higher confidence highlighted in blue).
Source: Bloomberg, Bank of Communications (Int’l)
Note that when relative valuation is at its long-term average of 0.4, the implied trading range from our analysis in Table 1 is
indeed below the index’s current level of around 3300. Within the likely trading range for 2017 we highlighted in blue, only 1/3
is above 3300, with a wide dispersion of potential outcomes. That said, our estimated trading range of 2800-3800 for 2017 is
higher than the range of 2500-3300 estimated exactly twelve months ago. Further, assuming rising HKD relative to CNY, and the
connect program goes smoothly, southbound funds should offset outflows from Hong Kong due to a strong Dollar (Focus Chart
13). The A shares are moving closer to the oversold territory, but the post-bubble correction has not gone deep enough
compared with historical precedents (Focus Chart 14).
Focus Chart 13: Hong Kong has shown allocation value since February 2016.
Source: Bloomberg, Bank of Communications (Int’l)
3,238 1.60% 1.00% 0.40% -1.00% -1.60% -2.20% -2.80%2.60% 2,708 2,949 3,238 4,194 4,802 5,616 6,762 2.65% 2,690 2,928 3,212 4,150 4,745 5,537 6,649 2.70% 2,672 2,906 3,186 4,107 4,689 5,461 6,539 2.75% 2,654 2,885 3,160 4,065 4,634 5,387 6,434 2.80% 2,637 2,864 3,136 4,024 4,581 5,315 6,331 2.85% 2,619 2,844 3,111 3,984 4,528 5,245 6,232 2.90% 2,602 2,824 3,087 3,944 4,477 5,177 6,136 2.95% 2,585 2,804 3,063 3,906 4,428 5,110 6,042 3.00% 2,568 2,784 3,040 3,868 4,379 5,046 5,952 3.05% 2,552 2,765 3,017 3,830 4,331 4,982 5,864 3.10% 2,536 2,746 2,994 3,794 4,284 4,921 5,779 3.15% 2,520 2,727 2,972 3,758 4,239 4,861 5,696 3.20% 2,504 2,708 2,949 3,723 4,194 4,802 5,616 3.25% 2,488 2,690 2,928 3,688 4,150 4,745 5,537 3.30% 2,473 2,672 2,906 3,654 4,107 4,689 5,461 3.35% 2,457 2,654 2,885 3,621 4,065 4,634 5,387 3.40% 2,442 2,637 2,864 3,588 4,024 4,581 5,315 3.45% 2,427 2,619 2,844 3,556 3,984 4,528 5,245 3.50% 2,413 2,602 2,824 3,525 3,944 4,477 5,177
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Focus Chart 14: Shanghai’s post-bubble correction appears too shallow compared with historical levels.
Source: Bloomberg, Bank of Communications (Int’l)
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Research Team
Head of Research @bocomgroup.com Head of Research/ Strategy @bocomgroup.com
Raymond CHENG, CFA, CPA, CA (852) 3766 1818 raymond.cheng Hao HONG, CFA (852) 3766 1802 hao.hong
Banks/Network Financials Strategy
Shanshan LI, CFA (86) 10 8800 9788 - 8058 lishanshan Karen TAN (852) 3766 1825 karen.tan
Li WAN, CFA (86) 10 8800 9788 - 8051 wanli
Hannah HAN (86) 10 8800 9788 - 8055 hannah.han
Consumer Mid-Cap Industrial & Building Materials
Summer WANG, CFA (852) 3766 1808 summer.wang Angus CHAN (852) 3766 1805 angus.chan
Environmental Services Property
Wallace CHENG (852) 3766 1810 wallace.cheng Alfred LAU, CFA, FRM (852) 3766 1807 alfred.lau
Philip TSE, CFA, FRM (852) 3766 1815 philip.tse
Luella GUO (852) 3766 1830 luella.guo
Gaming & Leisure Renewable Energy
Alfred LAU, CFA, FRM (852) 3766 1807 alfred.lau Louis SUN (86) 21 6065 3606 louis.sun
Healthcare Technology
David LI (852) 3766 1811 david.li Chris YIM (852) 3766 1803 christopher.yim
Insurance & Brokerage Transportation & Industrials
Shanshan LI, CFA (86) 10 8800 9788 - 8058 lishanshan Geoffrey CHENG, CFA (852) 3766 1809 geoffrey.cheng
Li WAN, CFA (86) 10 8800 9788 - 8051 wanli Fay ZHOU (852) 3766 1816 fay.zhou
Jennifer ZHANG (852) 3766 1850 yufan.zhang
Internet Automobile
Yuan MA, PhD (86) 10 8800 9788 - 8039 yuan.ma Angus CHAN (852) 3766 1805 angus.chan
Connie GU, CPA (86) 10 8800 9788 - 8045 conniegu
Mengqi SUN (86) 10 8800 9788 - 8048 mengqi.sun
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China Market Strategy
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