China health stocks slammed as investors fear regulators' diagnosis
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[July 28, 2021] SHANGHAI
(Reuters) - Investors have rushed to exit bets on China's health sector
this week, fearing that a regulatory crackdown that sparked panic
selling in the tech and education sectors might hit the medical industry
next.
Medical expenses are one of three key areas of living costs seen as
Beijing's targets for social change, heightening expectations that
authorities will make healthcare their next focus of market reform.
"Real estate, education, and healthcare are the three big mountains and
the government inevitably has to tackle the issues," said Ming Liao,
founding partner of Beijing-based private equity firm Prospect Avenue
Capital.
Selling has been fierce and although the Hang Seng healthcare index
bounced 7% on Wednesday, it is still down about 11% for the week
compared with a similar drop in the hard-hit Hang Seng Tech index and a
7.2% week-so-far plunge in the broader Hang Seng index.
Among mainland China stocks, the CSI300 Healthcare index was in freefall
from last Thursday until it steadied on Wednesday, shedding roughly 13%
in the process, trailing a 20% fall suffered by education stocks but
outstripping the broader market.
"I think obviously (small investors) have panicked," said Andy Maynard,
head of equities at China Renaissance in Hong Kong, who feels the rout
may have been a bit overdone.
Graphic: China healthcare follows tech lower -
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Among the worst hit stocks are those with a tech overlap: JD Health
International, Alibaba Health Information Technology and Genscript
Biotech Corp., racked up losses between 27% and 36% over the past five
days.
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Investors look at computer screens showing stock information at a
brokerage in Shanghai, China, August 13, 2015. REUTERS/Aly Song
China's health sector is vast, comprising defensive service providers,
pharmaceuticals and fast-growing tech and biotech firms, though it had been seen
as exposed to big demographic trends and supported by rising public and private
spending.
Reforms over the past decade have sought to expand social health insurance,
public procurement of medicine and hospital building. Last month, China's State
Council, or cabinet, promised further progress on medicine prices.
Huang Yan, vice president of Shanghai See Truth Investment Management, said the
government would likely take a targeted approach to tackling different parts of
the sector in its drive for social reform.
"Sectors like cosmetic medicine consume wealth but create little social value,"
he said. "But the government will continue to support innovative drugmaking,
while reducing drug prices through bulk-buying."
Still, while costs remain high and quality of care has been an issue outside big
cities, analysts are nervous about where the authorities' next move lands.
"The jittery...search for the next shoe to drop may keep investors away from
engaging for now," said Tommy Xie, OCBC Bank's head of greater China research.
(Reporting by Samuel Shen and Andrew Galbraith in Shanghai; Writing and
additional reporting by Tom Westbrook; Editing by Vidya Ranganathan and Sam
Holmes)
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