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China real estate troubles are sign of strength, not weakness
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Equities

China real estate troubles are sign of strength, not weakness

The real question is whether China is strong enough to let developers fail, says portfolio manager Ross Cameron

October 26, 2021
Shanghai real estate headquarters
Brought to you by: Northcape Capital
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Ross Cameron, Ross Cameron

Ross Cameron is a portfolio manager/analyst at Northcape Capital. With over 14 years investment experience, he is portfolio manager and analyst for the company’s Emerging Markets equity strategy. Cameron joined Northcape in 2009, and since then has worked in Melbourne, Tokyo and Sydney. Before joining Northcape, he spent three years working with Capital Partners (now CP2). During his time as an analyst for Capital Partners’ concentrated international equities fund, he covered a broad range of sectors including financials, industrials and infrastructure. Prior to joining the investment industry, he taught decision analysis in the School of Operations Management and Econometrics at the University of Sydney. Cameron holds a Bachelor of Commerce (Finance, Japanese Studies) degree from the University of Sydney.

Funds

  • Emerging Markets Concentrated Equity: segregated fund
  • Canada Life Emerging Markets Concentrated Equity Fund - mutual fund

Fonds

  • Concentré d'actions des marchés émergents: fonds distinct
  • Fonds concentré d’actions de marchés émergents Canada Vie - fonds commun de placement

(Runtime: 4:59. Read the audio transcript.)

**

The lesson from China’s recent real estate troubles appears to be lost on some western analysts, says Ross Cameron, portfolio manager with Northcape Capital in Tokyo.

Far from being a sign of economic weakness, the Chinese government’s refusal to bail out over-extended developers is a show of strength, Cameron said.

“The media currently is asking the question, ‘Is Beijing strong enough to bail out Evergrande and the property developers?’ That’s exactly backwards,” he said. “The question really is, ‘Is Beijing strong enough to let these property developers fail?’ Because Beijing really wants to send the message that, yes, property developers can fail in China. This is not just a safe place to put capital, resulting in this massive overbuild and the famous ghost cities in China.”

Cameron said the Chinese government’s past actions have led many investors to believe Beijing will manipulate the economy to suit its intentions. But things are different under Xi, whom Cameron describes as the strongest Chinese leader since Mao Zedong.

“He has a very long-term time horizon. His term is indefinite. It’s basically as long as he is on this earth,” Cameron said. “And so, instead of the previous leadership — which was looking at GDP on a quarter-to-quarter basis and was probably afraid to make profound economic changes — Xi is much more willing to accept near-term pain for what he sees as necessary long-term benefit.”

Cameron believes the current turbulence is a manifestation of that new attitude. With limited investment options, Chinese money has flooded into the housing sector and there are more homes than can possibly be sold, financed by unrestrained corporate debt.

“This is very bad from a resource allocation perspective. It’s bad from an economic perspective. And Xi Jinping wants to end that era,” said Cameron. “Allowing these companies to fail shows strength and it shows a willingness to rebalance the economy on a long-term view.”

He pointed out that the tough stance taken by Xi is a byproduct of the stated goal of “common prosperity,” which aims to reduce the wealth gap.

“I think you’re going to see a profound repricing of the Chinese equity markets. Certain sectors will benefit from common prosperity, but there will be casualties as well,” he said.

China-watchers say change is necessary to stimulate investor returns. Despite years of economic successes and steady growth, the Chinese equity market remains sluggish — if not completely stalled — since the global financial crisis, Cameron said.

“If you think about the Shanghai A Share Index, it’s really gone nowhere. And this is over a period where the economy has grown [by] high single digits. It’s the fastest-growing major economy in the world. And that just hasn’t translated, in aggregate, to investor returns,” he said.

“I think Beijing wants to change that. It wants to send the message that projects that don’t make economic sense will fail. The government is not going to bail them out and that’s going to be painful over the next six to 12 months, but it creates a more positive landscape on a three- to five-year view and beyond.”

**

This article is part of the Soundbites program, sponsored by Canada Life. The article was written without sponsor input.

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