MSCI’s inclusion of China A-shares in the MSCI Emerging Markets index

MSCI’s inclusion of China A-shares in the MSCI Emerging Markets indexMSCI’s inclusion of China A-shares in the MSCI Emerging Markets index

Comment from Sean Taylor, CIO APAC at Deutsche Asset Management- MSCI’s inclusion of China A-shares in the MSCI Emerging Markets index

“In the short-term, MSCI Inclusion will initially have small effect on the amount of foreign money flowing into the Chinese market. Firstly, domestic shares will only comprise 0.73% of MSCI’s global emerging market index, with an estimated USD14bn capital flow from active and passive. Secondly, the inclusion will only begin in May 2018 and August 2018. In the near-term, A-shares market is subject to the risk of tightening liquidity due to financial de-leveraging, slower shadow banking activities and slower M2 growth. We expect H-shares and US traded Chinese companies to dominate investors’ interest.

In the medium term, MSCI’s decision should improve investors’ interest and confidence in the A-share market. These stocks are currently traded in the Connect Program, meaning a much improved access for global investors to the China A-share market. This also removed the concern of capital repatriation. It is an important milestone for more significant representation of A-shares in the index in the future and increased prominence of Chinese equities in global investors’ portfolio.”

Sean Taylor

CIO APAC

Deutsche Asset Management

With EUR 723 billion of assets under management (as of March 31, 2017), Deutsche Asset Management¹ is one of the world’s leading investment management organizations. Deutsche Asset Management offers individuals and institutions traditional and alternative investments across all major asset classes.

¹ Deutsche Asset Management is the brand name of the Asset Management division of the Deutsche Bank Group. The respective legal entities offering products or services under the Deutsche Asset Management brand are specified in the respective contracts, sales materials and other product information documents.

 

China A-shares finally in after four attempts

China A-shares finally in after four attempts

MSCI has finally decided to include China mainland companies in its MSCI Emerging Market benchmark. While some obstacles that have prevented A-shares to be included in the past remain, many have been removed. As a result of the inclusion, A-shares stocks may benefit from short-term bet. We however believe that a credible reform agenda and adherence to it would be a stronger support for domestic companies over the longer run. China A-shares finally in after four attempts.

Yesterday evening, MSCI finally decided to include 222 A-shares stocks in the MSCI Emerging Market Index, an addition of 53 stocks compared to the 169 proposed, increasing the weight of the country in the benchmark by 0.73% (rather than 0.5%) to 28.4%.

The new proposal submitted yesterday has removed many of the obstacles from the original failed proposal discussed three years ago. Amongst other factors, the number of stocks has been trimmed down to 169 (proposed) from 448 as only large cap companies with the least liquidity issue were selected.

The implementation of a 5% inclusion factor from the index provider indicates that constraints remain on capital repatriation and foreign ownership limits. While full inclusion is still on the roadmap and while the Stock Connect system has increased confidence among foreign investors, China still has a long way to go as strict controls of the domestic capital markets are unlikely to be removed anytime soon.

Market participants have however welcomed the news whilst being cautious on the real impact of the inclusion on the valuation of China domestically-listed companies. A-shares price-to-earnings ratio relative to H-shares shows that A-shares is currently fairly valued with the relative PE ratio at 2.14 compared to its 1.92 median since 2008. So far this morning, there has been little reaction from the markets. We may see more movement once the US market opens later today.

With the size of the inclusion still representing a small proportion of the overall size of the Chinese market capitalisation, we believe a solid recovery of Chinese manufacturing PMI based on a credible reform agenda would be a stronger support for A-shares over the longer run.

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Edith Southammakosane, Multi-Asset Strategist at ETF Securities

Edith is a director, multi-asset strategist at ETF Securities, specialised in investment strategies across commodity, equity, currency and fixed-income. Edith has 9 years of experience in the ETP industry, with exposure to different aspects of the business, from product management to research and investment strategy. Prior to joining ETF Securities, Edith started her career working for Lyxor Asset Management in Paris as Marketing assistant. Edith holds a Master in Management with a major in Risk and Asset Management from the EDHEC business school (France).

China A-shares, Short term headwinds, but positives in the medium term

China A-shares, Short term headwinds, but positives in the medium term

ETF Securities Equity Research: China A-shares, Short term headwinds, but positives in the medium term.

Highlights

  • Financial conditions in China are tightening as policy makers are attempting to reverse some of the stimulus from last summer.
  • The ongoing deleveraging process is a headwind for A-share equity performance in the short-term which has a tight correlation to domestic liquidity conditions.
  • However we see state-owned enterprise reforms and the inclusion of A-shares in global equity indices as two drivers of a potential re-rating of the market in the medium term.

Policy is tightening in China

China has been taking pre-emptive steps since the start of the year to tighten financial conditions. The improvement in both the domestic and external outlook since last year has emboldened policy makers to tackle some of the excesses in the build-up in leverage. Since 2008 China has had the biggest increase in its ratio of debt to gross domestic product of any country. The BIS estimates that ratio jumped from 141 per cent at the start of 2009 to 260 per cent by the end of 2016. As the central bank (PBoC) outlined in its monetary report last December, it is increasingly worried about financial sector stability and unintended asset bubbles.

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The tightening steps since the start of the year include both quantitative as well as qualitative elements: a) hiking short-term interest rates across the interest rate corridor b) slowing the growth of total social finance and c) tightening bank regulations to reign in off-balance sheet lending and especially the shadow banking sector.

The net impact of these actions has been to tighten domestic liquidity. Both money market rates and bond yields have risen sharply since January to multi-year highs. The move up in rates so far has been orderly, with the PBoC limiting dislocations by injecting liquidity when needed, but it is now 20% more costly for companies and households to borrow than at the start of the year.

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The tighter funding conditions have so far had a mixed impact on economic growth. Some indicators such as falling industrial metal prices and an inverted yield curve send a negative signal for future growth prospects. Other indicators such as the latest PMI and retail sales point to a more robust domestic demand picture. Excess capacity in both the industrial and property sectors look less worrying than a few years ago, and external demand still looks strong. As a result, the downside risks to growth are more limited than in the 2015 growth scare. Our own leading indicator signals a moderation in activity but not a sharp slowdown.

Tighter liquidity a negative for short-term equity performance

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Although we do not expect a sharp downturn in growth, tighter financial conditions have never been a good backdrop for on-shore domestic equities. A-shares are tightly correlated to domestic liquidity as up to 80% of turnover is generated by retail investors. In previous episodes of liquidity tightening A-shares have underperformed both H-shares and other emerging markets, and so far it has not been different this time. A-Shares have been among the worst performing emerging market year-t0-date, down –1% in local currency versus up +11% for H-shares and +12% for the MSCI EM.

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Since mid-March the onshore equity market has seen reduced account openings, lower trading volumes and a reduction in leveraged margin trading. Without a looser policy stance, there are few triggers for A-shares to outperform in the short-term. Valuations are not particularly cheap at 14x forward P/E versus a 5yr average of 13x. Neither are relative valuations to H-shares particularly compelling at the moment trading roughly in-line with the 5-year average.

SOEs reforms and index inclusion are medium-term positives

Despite the short-term headwinds, we think A-share multiples could re-rate to a higher sustained P/E in the medium term for two reasons.

First, we are starting to see signs that state-owned enterprises are becoming more share-holder friendly. The state agency tasked with regulating SOEs (SASAC) issued guidelines last year for SOEs to increase transparency and improve corporate governance. One of the largest state-owned coal companies came out with an unexpected special dividend shortly after the announcement and the expectation is that we could see more SOEs follow suit. We have also seen recent reforms to rationalise capacity in SOE dominated sectors, particularly commodities, where there have been significant plant closures in steel, coal and cement since 2015.

Second, we think the potential inclusion of A-shares in global equity benchmarks is another medium-term driver. There has been ongoing discussions to include on-shore companies in benchmarks available to foreign investors over the years. These discussions have accelerated recently as Chinese authorities have improved foreign access to capital markets over the last two years. We could get a decision by MSCI in mid-June and the resulting inclusion (if any) could begin in June 2018.

Conclusion

The PBoC is taking welcome steps to reign in some of the excessive credit growth since the great financial crisis. Although these steps are a short-term headwind for A-share performance, they should help financial stability in the medium-term. We continue to think that with further capital account liberalisation and SOE reforms, A-shares represent an interesting opportunity over the medium-term.

For more information contact:

ETF Securities Research team
ETF Securities (UK) Limited
T +44 (0) 207 448 4336
E info@etfsecurities.com

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Let Us In and We’ll Let You In

MSCI to China: Let Us In and We’ll Let You In

MSCI to China Let Us In and We’ll Let You In. Chinese regulators have realized that mainland equity markets need to be more accommodating, transparent, and, in the case of Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI), more open. Inclusion of China A-shares in MSCI’s Emerging Markets Index, a benchmark with an estimated $1.5 trillion tracking it, may be pivotal in encouraging new investment in the country.

In 2014, MSCI first considered including China A-shares in its Emerging Market Index. At that time MSCI, in consultation with clients, opted not to include them, citing ”remaining investability constraints linked to the Qualified Foreign Institutional Investment (QFII) and Renminbi Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor (RQFII) quota systems”.1

MSCI Collaborated with China to Foster Inclusion

In 2015, despite having made ”substantial progress toward the opening of the Chinese equity market to institutional investors”,2 MSCI felt there was additional liberalization that needed to take place. Once again, it chose not to include China. MSCI did, however, form a collaborative working group with the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) in the hopes of resolving the remaining issues.

Since the beginning of 2016, China has taken steps to meet MSCI’s requirements for accessibility and transparency. In February, QFII quotas were increased from $1 billion to $5 billion and lock-up periods were shortened from one year to three months. This was followed more recently by rules restricting trading halts in stocks. Trading halts have been a major concern for MSCI and investors alike following the sharp selloff that began in the summer of 2015. Under the new rules, a stock can halt trading for up to three months for ”major asset restructuring”, and up to one month during ”private placement”.3
China Has Instituted Many Positive Changes

The changes made so far this year, along with the anticipated expansion of the Shanghai-Hong Kong Stock Connect program to include the Shenzhen Stock Exchange, have some investors speculating that this could be the year that China finally gets a spot in the MSCI Emerging Markets Index. In a recent report, Goldman Sachs estimated that there was a 70% likelihood that MSCI would add China A-shares to its flagship benchmark.4 Any inclusion of A-shares would likely be phased in over time with an initial allocation expected to be around 5%.5

As China transitions from a manufacturing-based economy to a services-based economy, being included in the premier emerging markets benchmark will likely be welcomed news to investors.

MSCI Emerging Markets Index – Country Weights
as of May 31, 2016

Source: MSCI.

Authored by James Duffy, Product Manager, VanEck Vectors ETFs

ETFs is authored by VanEck thought leaders. VanEck is the sponsor of VanEck Vectors ETFs and is currently among the largest providers of exchange traded funds (ETFs) in the U.S. and worldwide. VanEck Vectors ETFs empower investors to help build better portfolios with access to compelling investment themes and strategies. Our ETFs span many global asset classes, and are built to be transparent, liquid, and pure-play reflections of target markets.

IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES

1 2014 MSCI Market Classification Review
2 2015 MSCI Market Classification Review
3 Shanghai Stock Exchange
4 Reuters Goldman Sachs raises odds of China share inclusion in MSCI indexes to 70 percent
5 Reuters MSCI Consultation on China A-Share Index Inclusion Roadmap

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Kinas aktiemarknad mer komplex än Du tror

Kinas aktiemarknad mer komplex än Du tror

Investerare med bred internationell aktieexponering vill ha positioner i kinesiska aktier. På grund av de stränga kontroller som myndigheterna i Kina utöver på de finansiella marknaderna är emellertid utländska investerare underallokerade när det gäller Kinas inhemska aktiemarknad. Det är emellertid möjligt för utländska investerare att komma åt marknaden för kinesiska A-aktier genom att investera i börshandlade fonder. Kinas aktiemarknad mer komplex än Du tror.

I slutet av september 2015 beståd 94 procent av värdet i de USA-noterade börshandlade fonderna med fokus på den kinesiska aktiemarknaden, av aktier i kinesiska företag som listas utanför Kina, antingen på Hong Kong-börsen eller på New York Stock Exchange. Siffrorna verifieras av en studie utförd av CSop Asset Management.

ETF investerare har fått tillgång till Kina genom de ETFer som äger H-aktier – till exempel iShares Kina Large-Cap ETF (NYSEArca: FXI), den största Kina ETFen med 6,2 miljarder dollar i förvaltat kapital. Hong Kong-noterade kinesiska bolag har bara en 0,65 korrelation till Shanghai Composite eller ungefär lika mycket som dess korrelation till S & P 500 på 0,59 är.

På grund av sin begränsade förekomst kan emellertid Kina A-Shares ge fördelar för investerare, till exempel en ökad diversifiering. Många portföljer är diversifierade över tillgångsslag och marknadssegment, men relativt få aktiekurser visar korrelation fördelar för amerikanska eller europiska aktier. I sin rapport skriver CSop Asset Management att Tillväxtmarknader, som för närvarande inkluderar Kina H noterade aktier, har visat sig fungera som en bra diversifiering mot amerikanska aktier men korrelationen har varit höga i förhållande till andra klasser på grund av den starka korrelation som kinesiska H-Shares har till den amerikanska aktiemarknaden.

Kinesiska A-aktier är en specifik klass av aktierelaterade värdepapper som är emitterade av kinesiska företag och denominerade i RMB. Enligt gällande kinesiska bestämmelser kan utländska investerare få tillgång till A-Shares, om de är utsedda utländsk institutionell investerare eller fått tillgång till programmet genom antingen Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor (QFII) eller en renminbi Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor (RQFII) program.

Deutsche db X-trackers Harvest CSI 300 China A-Shares ETF (NYSEArca: ASHR) är den största Kina A-Shares ETFen, med 503 MUSD i förvaltat kapital. Andra Kina A-Shares ETFer inkluderar KraneShares Bosera MSCI China A ETF (NYSEArca: KBA), Market Vectors ChinaAMC A-Share ETF (NYSEArca: PEK) och CSop FTSE China A50 ETF (NYSEArca: AFTY). CSop Asset Management lanserade nyligen sina börshandlade fonder, CSOP MSCI China A International Hedged ETF (NYSEArca: CNHX) och smart beta CSOP China CSI 300 A-H Dynamic ETF (NYSEArca: HAHA).

Den placerare som är oroad för en deprecierande kinesisk yuan valuta kan utnyttja CNHX att få tillgång till kinesiska A-aktier och hedge sin valuta risk. Vissa företag har emitterat både kinesiska A-aktier och Hong Kong-noterade H-aktier. De förstnämnda handlas ibland till ett premium jämfört med H-aktierna, vilket gör att HAHA kommer att välja den billigaste aktien när så är möjligt.

Deutsche Asset and Wealth Management lanserade nyligen Deutsche dX-trackers CSI 300 China A-Shares Hedged Equity ETF (NYSEArca: ASHX), som fungerar som en yuansäkrad version av ASHR.