“When is China’s market coming back?” Buck Sexton asked me a couple weeks ago.
Buck is a relatively young conservative commentator. And he recently got the dream gig for a conservative commentator. He was asked to fill some huge shoes… Today, Buck co-hosts The Clay Travis & Buck Sexton Show, the official replacement program for The Rush Limbaugh Show.
I got to know Buck when he came on a trip to China I hosted with a group of subscribers back in 2019.
I was impressed that he signed on to go… and that he went with an open mind.
You see, most conservative commentators haven’t been there. Heck, even extremely high-ranking officials who set China policy in the U.S. (like Peter Navarro during the Trump administration) have barely seen China.
Buck Sexton has seen it. He knows what it looks like on the ground. He knows that Beijing is as advanced as any city in America, if not more so. And he knows that the American view of China’s economy might have been true 20 years ago… But it isn’t like that today.
So the phrasing of his question was interesting… He has been to China. He knows the tide is inevitable. So he asked me when China’s market is coming back… not if.
Today, I’ll share why that’s the right frame of mind when viewing China, even if it seems like a dangerous place to invest today.
I keep thinking investor sentiment towards China has bottomed… Then, it gets worse.
The recent fear is the sweeping regulation that’s coming from Beijing. One of the latest changes was a ban on profits for an entire group of publicly traded companies – the for-profit education industry is going non-profit. Those stocks fell roughly 70% on the news.
Buck’s question came before that news crashed Chinese stocks even further. But his question of when – not if – is still valid.
I can’t give personalized investing advice, so I couldn’t answer Buck directly. But I can discuss my thoughts on China here…
While U.S. stocks have absolutely soared in 2021, China’s markets have lagged.
Now, even saying “China’s markets” is too nonspecific to be useful. There are Chinese companies listed in Hong Kong (H-shares), Chinese companies listed in mainland China (A-shares), and plenty of other ways to split up the market.
Since peaking in February, H-shares are down 24%, while A-shares have fallen 13%. Take a look…
U.S. stocks are up 14% over the same period. So it’s no wonder observers of China’s market are asking what the heck is going on.
The situation is even worse than the chart above shows, though. That’s because the regulatory shake-up is gripping a group of Chinese companies that has consistently spit out hefty returns… the technology and Internet sector.
That includes Tencent, the world’s largest video-game company and owner of the mega-app WeChat… Alibaba and JD.com, China’s two largest e-commerce platforms… and Trip.com, the “Priceline of China.”
These stocks have soared over the last decade, even during tough times for the overall Chinese market. The KraneShares CSI China Internet Fund (KWEB), which holds them, more than tripled from February 2016 through February 2021.
But then, just as the H-share and A-share markets peaked, so did KWEB. The fund has crashed 53% since its high. Take a look…
It has been a rough few months for investors in China… But it won’t last forever.
The long-term opportunity in Chinese stocks – the one I’ve been pounding the table on for years – is still in place. The country continues to experience incredible economic growth. And its markets are maturing rapidly.
There will be plenty of more bumps along the way. And it’s possible the regulatory changes we’ve seen aren’t over. But I urge you not to give up on China for good.
Instead, you want to have a plan. If you’re going to invest in China, you need to follow your stops. You need to be willing to walk away when things get too wild (like right now). But you also need to be willing to get back in when things change.
For now, you should approach China with caution. But I urge you not to give up on Chinese stocks forever.
Good investing,
Steve
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Source: Daily Wealth