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China’s disappointing first half has the economy ripe for some help, and investors are preparing to ride an expected short-term wave of stimulus, even if structural problems look to hold back a sustainable rally.

The latest data this week showed an economy struggling for momentum in the second quarter. A post-COVID recovery is quickly faltering, with exports declining owing to cooling demand abroad and a prolonged property market downturn sapping confidence.

The grim readings raised the specter of China missing its modest 5-per-cent growth target for 2023, and spurred hopes of stronger stimulus measures after the upcoming July Politburo meeting of top Chinese officials.

“For China, it is ‘bad news is good news’ at the moment,” said Jun Bei Liu, portfolio manager at Tribeca Investment Partners in Sydney.

Ms. Liu expects to see increased stimulus targeting cyclical sectors, such as housing, and is more interested in the services sector in the belief that postpandemic demand will eventually rise.

“I think the reopening trade remains intact, though slower than before. China is not an ‘avoid’. [A] recovery is coming, albeit taking longer,” said Ms. Liu.

Even before the latest disappointing growth data, a slew of soft economic indicators had shown China’s recovery was falling short, slamming the brakes on nascent stock market rallies. The benchmark CSI 300 index is now down 0.5 per cent for the year, in stark contrast to the 16-per-cent rise in world stocks.

Foreign money has been leaving, with worries over China’s cyber-security crackdowns and Sino-U.S. flaps over chips and rare metals adding to growth concerns.

Foreign investors sold 2.7-billion yuan ($491.670-million) of Chinese shares in the second quarter, many making an exit after having pumped in a historical 186-billion yuan ($33.87-billion) a quarter before.

The promise of big-bang stimulus, which has hitherto been a stop-go mix of one rate cut and some loan relaxations for the property and state sectors, is now drawing some investors in.

“The weak growth prospects and lack of policy stimulus have already been fully priced in, and any marginal improvement in growth and policy conditions should trigger a turnaround in market sentiment,” said Marcella Chow, global market strategist at J.P. Morgan Asset Management.

“In the near term, cyclical sectors, such as consumer discretionary, materials and property, may be the major beneficiaries.”

REVIEWING CHINA

Goldman Sachs analysts led by Kinger Lau also believe a ‘tactical market recovery’ thesis is compelling, and project a 15-per-cent 12-month return for the CSI300.

“In fact, ‘China is a trade’ was a dominant theme in the majority of our meetings across investor types, regardless of their level of cautiousness and pessimism on the long-term growth and geopolitical outlooks,” they said in a note.

JPMorgan cut China’s 2023 growth forecast to 5 per cent from 5.5 per cent, while forecasting a deeper contraction of 20 per cent this year in new construction.

The bank says possible steps the government could take to boost economic growth include another policy rate cut and nationwide housing policy easing, including a relaxation of down-payment requirements.

“Everyone is looking for a big bang Politburo meeting at the end of July, it’s a bit like Fed watching,” said Mike Kelly, head of multiasset at PineBridge Investments.

But the strength of the policy package is expected to be constrained and targeted, according to some analysts, citing growing debt risks and officials’ recent speeches.

“We are conservative about the extent of the policy support down the road,” said Alicia Garcia Herrero, chief economist, Asia Pacific at Natixis. “Fiscal policies may not be easily implemented, given the already high public debt and the reduced efficiency of these policies.”

Eugenia Victorino, head of Asia strategy at SEB, also reckons Beijing’s emphasis on patience will mean fresh support will be targeted, but is hopeful that recent policy support measures such as June’s rate cuts will begin to make themselves felt in coming months.

Beijing’s recent comments on doing more to support private enterprises, and the apparent end of a years-long regulatory crackdown on the tech sector could also be supportive factors for markets, Ms. Victorino added.

Nomura analysts led by Ting Lu say the stimulus “may not turn things around, due to weak confidence, negative sentiment.”

“We believe markets should curb their expectations for a fast, cure-all package and instead embrace expectations of a growth slowdown to below 4.0% in 2024,” they wrote.

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