Foreign cash streaming back into China

Foreign cash streaming back into China

News of Alibaba restructuring may signal more business-friendly shift, say analysts

Trading data for Alibaba is seen on a monitor at the New York Stock Exchange on March 28. (Photo: Reuters)
Trading data for Alibaba is seen on a monitor at the New York Stock Exchange on March 28. (Photo: Reuters)

SHANGHAI: Foreign investors are steadily marching into China in the wake of Alibaba’s plans to restructure, with money managers reckoning it is the latest sign the national leadership is turning friendlier to business as economic growth gains traction.

Exchange data shows net foreign buying of mainland-listed stocks every day since Alibaba announced its intention to split up and float its business units last week, for a record quarterly total.

Investors have also turned positive on the company and the stock is up this year after heavy falls in 2021 and 2022.

The flow may be signalling a shift in sentiment among foreign investors who have been notably absent while China’s markets and economy roared back to life after Beijing abruptly lifted its stringent zero-Covid policy in December.

The MSCI China index gained 4.5% in March against a gain of only 2.8% for world stocks. The Shanghai Composite index has just closed out its best quarter in more than two years, with a 5.9% gain.

Derrick Irwin, a portfolio manager at the US asset manager Allspring Global Investments, said the Alibaba breakup and founder Jack Ma returning to China appear part of an effort by the government to extend an olive branch to entrepreneurs.

“This may reignite investment in the private sector,” he said.

China since late 2020 has been pursuing a crackdown on a broad range of industries, leaving startups and its biggest companies alike operating in an uncertain environment. It punished tech companies for monopolistic behaviour among other issues, levying large fines on e-commerce firms including Alibaba.

Rob Brewis, a portfolio manager at the UK-based asset manager Aubrey Capital Management, said his firm had moved back into Chinese equities this year, mainly based on economic recovery hopes and cheap valuations.

Aubrey also bought Alibaba earlier in the year, having not owned it for the past two years. Alibaba’s recent plans are positive, said Brewis, who planned to keep “decent exposure”.

Alibaba’s shares are up more than 14% in the five days since the company’s announcement, and some 11.7 billion yuan ($1.7 billion) in foreign cash has flowed into China’s markets.

That’s already more than the net 9.2 billion yuan in inflows in February and drove March flows to 35.4 billion yuan and the quarter’s inflow to a record of 186 billion yuan.

Alibaba’s plans, which investors believe will touch off another era of growth and capital raising for the company, are being viewed as a broad sign of a policy shift because the company and its billionaire founder were high-profile targets during the crackdown.

The 11th-hour scuttling of the $37-billion public listing of the Alibaba fintech unit Ant Financial in November 2020, after some negative comments by Mr Ma about Chinese regulators, ushered in a period of unpredictable government and regulatory scrutiny that sent Alibaba stock down some 80% over two years to last October.

Last week’s announcement by the company comes on top of supportive comments from the authorities. Premier Li Qiang assured foreign investors that China would unswervingly adhere to reform and opening up, expanding market access and optimising the business environment.

As many as 67% of investors in the United States are now seeing the start of a trend towards more business friendly actions from Beijing, a recent survey by BofA Securities found, according to a note seen by Reuters and a source familiar with the matter. BofA Securities declined to comment.

Ernest Yeung, a portfolio manager at the US asset manager T Rowe Price, anticipated “a gradual process of stabilisation” of private enterprises and the internet sector.

His team has been focusing on investing in “forgotten or out-of-favour” stocks, and built a position in Alibaba last year.

The lingering question is how China reconciles its commitment to business with its political ideology.

Investors will watch “whether this is like Mao’s ‘Let a hundred flowers bloom’ campaign that will just be reversed if it doesn’t serve the interests of the Party,” said Brian Jacobsen, a senior investment strategist with Allspring. 
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