Shake-up in Chinese stocks raises questions over the future of international investing

Investing

Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.
Source: NYSE

The latest volatility in China – with regulators in Beijing attempting to reign in several sectors of the Chinese economy – is only the latest blow for international investors. 

“The invest in China mantra has always been based on the idea that China was going to be the next big global power, so that’s where I need to be,” Matt Maley, chief market strategist at Miller Tabak, told me. “That’s being rethought. How can you discount risk when it’s not clear what China will do?”

Even before this latest issue with China, international investing has been a difficult game. Now, international fund managers say it’s getting even harder.

“A lot of investors have given up on international investing,” Brendan Ahern, who runs KraneShares ETFs, which focuses on investing in China, told me. “If you are an international advisor, and you have had 10 years of underperformance, you are constantly defending why you are invested overseas.” 

Indeed, international fund managers have been on the defensive for some time. China has been underperforming the U.S. for more than a decade, but because China is such a heavy weighting in emerging markets funds, those emerging markets have also underperformed:

U.S. vs. China and emerging markets
(last 10 years)

S&P 500                           up 240%
China (MCHI)                   up 35%
Emerging Markets (EEM)  up 7%

Source: FactSet

Still, the rest of the developed world, including Europe, Japan, and even countries that are often considered “developed” such as Korea, have also underperformed the U.S.

U.S. vs. other developed/advanced markets
(last 10 years)

S&P 500                           up 240%
Japan (Nikkei)                up 184%
South Korea                    up 130%
Europe (EAFE)                up 37%

Source: FactSet

Why has the U.S. consistently outperformed? John Davi, who runs Astoria Advisors, which uses ETFs to allocate investments around the world, said the U.S. has proven to be a “higher quality” market. “International markets can outperform for a year or two, but then the U.S. always comes back,” he told me. 

“The U.S. is a higher quality market, and much of the rest of the world is lower quality,” he said. “Low quality can outperform for short periods, but not in the long run. In the 25 years I have been doing this, growth and quality have always outperformed in the long run, and for the most part that means the U.S. markets.” 

ETFs have made international investing easier

As passive investment strategies have gained favor with investors in the past 15 years, global investing has increased. These passive funds, usually ETFs, are tied to indexes created by firms like S&P, MSCI, and FTSE-Russell. Many investors are now allocating money to these international funds as part of a diversification strategy. The indexes are often weighted by the market capitalization of countries represented in the index. 

China is heavily represented in Asian and emerging market funds. For example, Hong Kong and mainland China are almost 40% of the weighting of two of the largest emerging market ETFs: the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF and the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF.

International fund managers who are already increasingly defensive about overseas investing now have a new hurdle: Is China a separate asset class because of its high regulatory risk?

Dave Nadig, director of research at ETF Trends, thinks the answer is yes.

“China is a unique and special case in the global economy,” he tells me. ”From a U.S. investor’s perspective, we should look at international investing as the U.S., China, and everyone else. China can change the rules of the game so quickly we have to think about it differently. If nothing else the regulatory risk is much higher than we thought.”

Some large funds, such as the Ark Innovation ETF run by Cathie Wood, have already cut their holdings of China stocks.

Other observers of the global markets believe that much of this tension is being generated by friction with the U.S., and that China would be less aggressive if relations improved.

“The U.S. and China together make around 40% of the global economy, so tensions of this kind absolutely pose a headwind,” Gita Gopinath, chief economist of the International Monetary Fund, said on our air. ”And we need everything going right to keep this recovery going to get the world back out of this pandemic…

“Yes, there are things that need to be fixed – the global trade system is far from perfect and that needs to be addressed. We need to make sure that industries are well regulated, but again it’s just not very helpful for the world economy when you have two of the largest world economies not really working together.”

Who will invest in China? 

At the very least, it means investors that do not need to benchmark to global indexes will be rethinking their China positions.

Davi believes there will always be China investors – at the right price.

“There will always be value guys looking to put money into China, because it’s cheap,” Davi told me, noting that the S&P 500 is trading at 20 times forward earnings, but MCHI (the largest China ETF) is trading at 14 times forward earnings.

Davi also believes that many investors still believe in the secular growth story that has powered China for 20 years.

“Emerging markets are not for the faint of heart. Volatility is in the DNA of these funds,” he said. “You have to be very long-term; you have to believe in the secular theme that the Chinese consumer is going to keep growing faster than the rest of the world, and China stocks will capture some of that. But along the way, it can be very painful.”

International investing: not dead yet

As for international investing in general, Nadig said investors this year have been betting on a rebound, noting that $100 billion in new money has flowed into international equities ETFs this year in the U.S. alone. “I understand the concerns economists have, but from a flows perspective it’s been pretty darn good,” he said.

The consistent underperformance is a major issue, but Nadig said many are still betting that developed markets, at least, will begin to mean revert, as they have in the past.

“International equities is a tough place to be, given the U.S. outperformance [over the past decade],” he said. ”The question is, do you believe that will continue for the next year, or even 10 years?” Just in terms of flows this year, with the exception of China, “the market has indicated that, so far, it doesn’t care.”

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