Global investors relieved by China tech rebound, but not convinced yet
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[July 12, 2023] By
Xie Yu and Summer Zhen
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Rather than spur a relief rally in China's
battered tech sector, the past week's developments at Jack Ma-founded
Ant Group have merely reminded global investors of the fickle nature of
the country's regulatory policies and the fragility of the sector.
The initial market reaction when China announced a $984 million fine for
the Alibaba Group affiliate for violating laws and regulations was one
of relief, with many market watchers saying it signalled the end of a
multi-year regulatory crackdown on the country's technology sector.
But technology shares, including offshore-listed American depository
receipts (ADRs), have barely rallied. Fund managers cite numerous
reasons for steering clear of the sector, including stringent regulation
in the future and a flagging domestic economy.
"In short, tech policy tightening may have come to an end but will
remain tight going forward," said Jon Withaar, head of Asia special
situations at Pictet Asset Management.
"The more accommodative regulatory conditions we saw in the past, which
facilitated explosive growth across the platforms, have given way to
higher levels of regulation and oversight which will likely mean more
moderate growth in the mid to long term."
Both the Hong Kong-listed shares of Alibaba and its ADRs are up more
than 9% since Friday, when the fine was announced. But they still are
trading at a third of their price levels in October 2020.
The KraneShares CSI China Internet ETF is up 5.4% since Friday, while
back home the CSI Overseas China Internet Index is up nearly 3%.
Yet China tech valuations have been gutted in the nearly 3 years since
Ant was forced to shelve its initial share offering, and fund managers
see plenty of headwinds, apart from just policy scrutiny. Alibaba shares
are traded at 11 times forecast earnings, while rival behemoth Amazon
Inc is at 59 times.
"The golden era for these internet companies is evidently over. They
have entering a long winter of price competition and market
consolidation, an adjustment that is not going to end in one or two
years’ time," says Wong Kok Hoi, founder and CIO of APS Asset
Management, which is based in Singapore and manages around $2 billion.
Wong points to intense price competition and monopolistic behaviours as
signs the business landscape had toughened. Meanwhile, there were new
regulations and more could come.
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Alibaba Group sign is seen at the World
Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC) in Shanghai, China July 6,
2023. REUTERS/Aly Song
"It is dangerous to assume that, after the imposition of the fine,
Ant financial can now do what it likes," he said. "Will regulators
now ease on enforcement after the fine? Don’t believe so because
this is not how regulators in any country work".
NO DEMAND EITHER
Meanwhile, China's shoppers are being more frugal even as borders
reopened after the pandemic, weighing on demand for China's fintech
firms and online commercial platforms such as Alibaba and JD.com, so
much so that some of them have stopped publishing the gross
merchandising value (GMV) data they used to tout in the past.
Kai Kong Chay, Hong Kong-based senior portfolio manager for Greater
China equities at Manulife Investment Management, says he is very
selective in picking only services-focused companies with pricing
power and penetration, given many others had no structural drivers
left.
Derrick Irwin, portfolio manager for Allspring’s intrinsic emerging
markets equity team, based in Boston, likewise believes regulatory
tightening has ended but that didn't mean a return to the regime
preceding Chinese President Xi Jinping's 'common prosperity' drive
and to the lofty valuations then. Alibaba's ADRs were at $315 then,
compared to $90 this week.
"The government has learned that the private sector - particularly
the tech sector - is a critical partner in jump-starting growth. The
government will continue to exert pressure on key tech companies
even as they allow growth to resume," he said.
For some sell-side analysts, though, China tech has turned a corner.
Morgan Stanley, for instance, has Alibaba as their top pick among
Chinese internet companies, with a target price of $150 that implies
a more than 60% rise.
Min Lan Tan, head of chief investment office, UBS Global Wealth
Management, APAC, based in Singapore, says most investors,
particularly institutions and hedge funds, have been staying
underweight on China.
"There is actually a lot of value in the internet space in China,
and what is really needed is a confidence that growth has
stabilized," she said.
(Writing by Vidya Ranganathan; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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