The huge Chinese economy is experiencing a 'second awakening'
under President Xi Jinping, with a strong agenda for supply-side
reforms and an emphasis on sustainable macroeconomic growth. Xi's
ambitious 'One Belt One Road' (OBOR) drive for geo-economic
integration also means the rest of Asia will rise with it,
especially given the complementary strengths of the region's
different economies.
Across much of Asia, a new cycle of quality growth has already
begun. In a break from the past, the pace will be moderately high
yet sustainable, leading to a more robust environment for corporate
profits to grow steadily and a positive backdrop for Asia's stock
markets.
In this context, we believe 2017 was a watershed year. The MSCI
Asia ex-Japan Index made gains in every calendar quarter. As we
write towards the year end, it has powered to returns of more than
30% in US dollar terms. Such a rally demonstrated what could happen
to Asia's stock markets as sustainable economic growth kicked in
and fed through to corporate earnings.
By the end of the year, valuations were mixed. Stocks that led
in the rally, such as the 'new economy' and technology names, are
no longer cheap. But pockets of attractive valuations remain. The
MSCI Asia Pacific ex-Japan Index trades at a forward price-earnings
multiple of about 13x as we write, hardly presenting a threat to
further market upside should the dynamics of 2017 sustain into the
next few years.1
Portending a quality growth cycle
Today's emerging quality growth cycle has been at least five
years in the making. Recounting the journey gives clues to the
future.
China has led in engineering the current stability. In the
aftermath of the Global Financial Crisis, the Hu Jintao
administration injected a massive fiscal stimulus into the economy.
This proved disastrous as it created excess capacity in various
sectors, and was poorly executed in terms of making sure the money
went into projects that were commercially viable, not to mention
the leakages due to corruption. The fiscal intervention's lack of
sustainability eventually led to a rapid growth deceleration in
2010-2012.
This painful adjustment shaped a new mindset. Since becoming
president in 2013, Xi has consistently emphasised sustainability of
growth over the pace of growth. Supply-side reforms and a more
balanced economy bode well for the future in terms of reducing
vulnerability to economic shocks.
China's pivotal event of 2017, the Communist Party of China's
19th National Congress, affirmed the dominance of Xi's political
clout and the stronger discipline within the Party, boding well for
an acceleration in supply-side reforms going forward. The
persistence of Xi's anti-corruption drive will also improve
corporate governance in China's vast state-owned enterprise sector,
which should help elevate the standard for the overall market. The
financial sector has weathered the challenges of rising debt and
shadow lending, and been cleansed through proactive regulatory
tightening. Admittedly, debt levels need watching but the
probability of a systematic crisis has receded significantly.
Xi's ambitious OBOR initiative aimed at geo-economic integration
also means the rest of Asia will rise with it, especially given the
different economies' complementary strengths. Across the region,
economic stability is twinned with political stability. New, strong
leaders have emerged such as Xi, India's Narendra Modi, Indonesia's
Joko Widodo (also known as Jokowi), Thailand's Prayut Chan-o-cha
and the Philippines' Rodrigo Duterte. The Korean peninsula remains
a geo-political hotspot but careful diplomacy should win the day,
with the positive chemistry that emerged between Xi and President
Trump being one of the major surprises in 2017.
Turning to India, the country should muddle through in 2018,
although it seemed to be struggling to maintain its current growth
momentum. India needs more fundamental reforms to address the
underlying reasons why problems exist in the first place. Recent
headline-grabbing policies - 2016's banknote de-monetisation,
2017's introduction of a Goods and Services Tax, and the
recapitalisation of state-owned banks - could be helpful for India
without a doubt, but they are not silver bullets for India's
complex problems. For growth to be more sustainable in the medium
to longer term, stronger action is needed to tackle a myriad of
issues such as environmental pollution, corruption, income
inequality and tax evasion. Notwithstanding such challenges, Indian
equities may still see upside in the near term if current earnings
projections materialise.
Set for a multi-year rally
The 2010-2012 growth slowdown has steadfastly morphed into a
solid trend of stable growth sustained at moderately high levels,
with evident translation into corporate earnings expansion. From
this perspective, we see the 2017 rally heralding the potential for
a multi-year economic and equity upcycle.
China clearly has the resources, vision and leadership ambition
to anchor this leg of the Asia Pacific century. Xi's supply-side
reforms and OBOR agenda are firmly secured at least for the next
five years. Given the remaining terms of the political leadership
in the rest of Asia, there should be enough stability for current
growth dynamics to continue running their course. Consolidated
industry structures, the return of pricing power, stronger consumer
confidence, improving corporate governance as well as continued
cost discipline should inject depth into the rally over the course
of 2018, barring external events that may punctuate but are
unlikely to derail the upward trend. High growth stocks in the 'new
economy' and technology sectors should continue to do well but are
unlikely to outperform in the manner which they did in 2017.
Instead, we expect confidence in the profit recovery of the
industrial and financial sectors to gather into more meaningful
re-rating in stock valuations. The potential for a steepening of
the yield curve may also spur upside for some banks and insurers.
From China to India and across Asia, the season is still ripe for
the active stock picker.
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1 Source: Bloomberg, consensus estimate, 30 November
2017.