Overseas Pros Worry Nobody Has an Edge Trading China Anymore

(Bloomberg) — The Chinese market rout is forcing money managers around the globe to re-assess the investment case for the world’s second-biggest economy.

Whether it’s economic growth or the regulatory landscape, professional investors say it’s all become a lot harder to predict, and it’s adding a new dimension of risk to global markets. To Ameriprise Financial Inc.’s Anthony Saglimbene, the long-term potential of China doesn’t look like it’s worth the risk anymore, while Kairos Partners’ Alberto Tocchio counted himself lucky for deciding to sell a few days ago.

“With so much negativity you’d really have to question where you have an edge versus the dominant market narrative,” said John Roe, the head of multi-asset funds at Legal & General, who is long Chinese bonds. “What we will avoid is selling into a panic.”

Beijing has targeted private education and technology companies in a series of far-reaching reforms that have raised questions about how far Xi Jinping’s Communist Party is willing to go.

The reaction in equities markets has dragged the MSCI China Index down 20% since the beginning of June, including an 11% plunge this week that marks the worst two-day drawdown since 2008.

“The latest crackdown is more violent than our expectation,” said Haiyan Li-Labbé, a fund manager at Carmignac. “Investors are asking which one will be the next.” The nervousness throughout markets was clear on Tuesday as speculation about U.S. traders dumping Chinese assets led to deepening losses. The Hang Seng Tech Index fell as much as 10% and the yuan slid to its weakest since April against the dollar.

Others were looking to buy on the cheap. Luke Hickmore, the investment director at Aberdeen Standard, said he’s debating whether to purchase more bonds of Sunac China Holdings Ltd., a Chinese real estate company.

“A lot of the sector has got caught up with Evergrande, perhaps unfairly,” he said. “We tend to see everyone punished for one problems with one group.”

Funds tracking the nation’s companies were among the biggest losing U.S. exchange-traded products. The $4.2 billion iShares China Large Cap ETF has lost 9% this week. The $4.3 billion KraneShares CSI China Internet Fund, which has lured more than $1 billion in the last two weeks, has fallen 15% in two days.

Tensions between the U.S. and China have also loomed large in the minds of traders, and there’s been widespread speculation about tougher enforcement actions. Next month, a ban on U.S. investment in some Chinese companies with ties to the military or surveillance industry, including Huawei Technologies Co. and the country’s three biggest telecommunications companies, will take effect. Fund managers will have one year to fully divest.

“Historically, China has put growth and innovation first, but it seems really over the last couple quarters they’re putting social-regulatory issues first and they’re willing to accept market volatility as a result,” said Michael Arone, chief investment strategist at State Street’s US SPDR Business.

Here’s what other market participants are saying:

Alberto Tocchio, a portfolio manager at Kairos Partners.

“The China crackdown has caught some of our funds where we had exposure either in the ADRs or Prosus in Europe. A couple days ago, I suggested halving the positions, but it still hurts,” he said. “The market is, however, now rightly scared about the increasing scrutiny and interference form the regulator and we are possibly in the early days of a new cold war and we might see some further capitulation.”

Matt Maley, chief market strategist for Miller Tabak + Co.

“Everybody thought it was just a one-time issue with Alibaba because Jack Ma had become too big for his britches,” he said. “However, with the moves in more recent months, we now know that it is a change in policy for China. It has changed the risk/reward equation significantly in terms of investing in China.”

Anthony Saglimbene, global market strategist at Ameriprise Financial Inc.

“Combined with deteriorating U.S./China relations, the investment picture for U.S. investors is very unclear at the moment,” said Saglimbene. And China’s recent regulatory crackdown across tech and education providers is having intense consequences for stock prices in these areas, as the level of uncertainty/risk may now outweigh the longer-term growth opportunities.”

Victoria Fernandez, chief market strategist at Crossmark Global Investments, said on Bloomberg TV:

“I think people are taking a step back, they’re looking at what their holdings are … They’re looking at their portfolios and saying, ‘do we reduce some of our exposure to some of these areas where there is increased uncertainty?’ But I don’t think we’ll see a full contagion at least in the short-term. We’re not sure how it plays out longer term.”

(Updates with new quotes.)

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