Displaying items by tag: China

Wednesday, 31 October 2018 09:48

Why China ETFs Have Volatile Returns

(Shanghai)

If you or your clients own any Chinese focused ETFs, you will have noticed a glaring fact—they have hugely variant returns even when the underlying holdings don’t seem that obviously different. China is a study in how different index weightings and configurations can impact returns. For instance, Chinese stocks as a whole have fallen 21% this year, however the 40 or so Chinese focused ETFs in the US market have ranged from a 5% positive to negative 40% return. Even seemingly broad ETFs, like the iShares Large-Cap ETF, have very varying results, as despite the 21% fall, that ETF only dropped 13%. This is because it has a 50% weighting towards financial stocks, which were largely unscathed.


FINSUM: The key point here is to know what you are buying. Each of the indexes being tracked are quite unique, even if you think you are just buying a broad “China ETF”.

Published in Eq: China
Thursday, 25 October 2018 13:03

China Pledges to Support Markets at Any Cost

(Beijing)

Beijing made a big proclamation yesterday. The country is in the midst of a brutal bear market—its benchmark Shanghai Composite has fallen 27%—but yesterday the government made a big announcement. It said that it would do “whatever it takes” to stop its falling stock market. A large pledge of support came from Xi Jinping himself, which given his grip on power, means that it can likely be counted on. One analyst thinks the bear market might be nearing its end, saying “Bottoming is a process, and we’re starting to see some evidence of reversals and lows taking shape”.


FINSUM: The big x-factor for China is that a trade war and tariffs hurt them much worse than the West, so it is very hard for us to agree that the market rout there is ending.

Published in Eq: Dev ex-US
Tuesday, 23 October 2018 09:21

The Market is Falling Apart

(New York)

Monday seemed like it was going to be a good day. Chinese stocks surged mightily, which pushed up US equities ahead of the market opening. However, things quickly turned into a rout, with the Dow and S&P 500 getting wounded badly. Everything from worries over the trade war, to Italy’s budget, to Saudi Arabia are weighing on the market right now. Solid earnings are helping prop the market up, but markets are still down strongly in pre-market trading today.


FINSUM: Many investors are starting to ask themselves if this bull market has finally peaked. We think it is a smart question. That said, as long as economic performance continues strongly, we have a hard time imagining the market will fall too steeply.

Published in Eq: Total Market
Wednesday, 17 October 2018 09:03

The Titanic Credit Risk Threatening Markets

(Beijing)

This story is not getting much attention in the US, but we thought it too big to ignore. S&P Global, one of the world’s leading credit raters, just announced that a “debt iceberg with titanic credit risks”. S&P says that China has seen a massive rise in borrowing by its local governments, much of it hidden from view, and the the excessive borrowing poses grave risks. The ratings agency says there is between $4.3 tn to $5.8 tn of off-balance sheet debt held by local governments following “rampant” borrowing. The debt is hidden is what are called “Local government financing vehicles” (LGFVs), which were entities used to raise debt before local governments were allowed to issue bonds in capital markets.


FINSUM: This is a pretty scary story that only the FT seems to be covering. It makes one wonder if LGFVs will be the acronym at the center of the next crisis.

Published in Bonds: Dev ex-US
Tuesday, 25 September 2018 08:39

JP Morgan Warns Trump to Cause Market Meltdown

(New York)

The very public grudge match between JP Morgan and President Trump appears to be continuing, albeit in a more subtle way this week. Strategists at JP Morgan went on the record saying that one of the biggest risks to the market right now is that Trump overestimates the US economy and makes a major miscalculation in his trade war with China. The big worry is that Trump takes the trade war too far and sends China into a recession, which would then reverberate and cause a global reversal, shocking markets.


FINSUM: China experiencing a significant downturn could cause a chain reaction amongst EM and developed economies which could come back to sting the whole western world.

Published in Eq: Large Cap
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