China jitters mount as easing calls echo across trading floors

Bloomberg

Investors have a clear message to China’s policy makers: more stimulus is needed, and quickly, to reignite a stalled recovery in markets.
The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) decision to give lenders a modest cash boost was met with declines in equities on Monday. And with data showing consumer spending took a dive in March, weighing on sentiment, traders are left waiting to see what policy makers will do with loan prime rates — key benchmark lending levels — on Wednesday.
“The market needs key actionable plans for easing measures for the property sector, the regulatory overhang on tech to be removed and China’s Covid-zero policy to go away,” said Kerry Goh, chief investment officer at Kamet Capital Partners Pte. “There’s no one-size-fits-all stimulus that can revive the markets and the economy.”
Assets across the world’s second-biggest economy have tumbled as a staunch commitment to Covid-zero, uncertainty over regulatory change and a property slowdown sapped demand. The benchmark CSI 300 Index has tumbled about 15% this year and remains in a bear market while bond yields have risen, underscoring concerns Beijing
is not be doing enough to arrest slowing growth.
While the PBOC reduced the reserve requirement ratio for most banks by 25 basis points on Friday, it refrained from cutting interest rates, adopting a cautious approach to monetary easing. Chinese banks are due to decide on the loan prime rates — the de-facto benchmark lending costs — on April 20.
But the nation’s property market is in a slump, retail spending took a nosedive in March as lockdowns shuttered millions in their homes and the jobless rate has hit the highest since the early stages of the pandemic.
“We see rising headwinds to China’s growth in 2022,” Zerlina Zeng, senior research analyst at CreditSights Singapore LLC, wrote in a note. The firm expects the PBOC to focus on targeted credit-easing measures to lower funding costs as part of efforts to prop up growth.
While China’s first quarter GDP numbers may mask the damage from the lockdowns across hubs, including financial powerhouse Shanghai, cracks may start to show in data ahead. That would bode ill for risk assets including stocks and credit, strategists say.
The disappearance of the premium Chinese bonds long had to Treasuries, exacerbated by a hawkish Federal Reserve, could also accelerate the exit of foreign investors from the world’s second-largest debt market, according to Daiwa Capital Markets.
“It will make it a lot more difficult for China to draw external debt inflows,” said Kevin Lai, chief economist for Asia ex-Japan. “We have long argued that the room for the PBOC to offer monetary stimulus is going to be far more limited when the Fed is turning more aggressive in its tightening campaign.”
Patience is wearing thin among stock investors as worries about the impact of the latest Covid upsurge eclipses promises of official market support. A rebound in the CSI 300 Index mid-March has petered out amid the nation’s worst Covid outbreak.
The benchmark is trading on just 12 times forward earnings — compared to a peak of 17 times last year — but profit estimates are under pressure amid the viral outbreaks.
All eyes will be on the “length of Covid-related shutdowns which, if persistent, will start to show up more aggressively in the broader economy,” Martin Dropkin, head of Asian fixed income at Fidelity International, wrote in a note. “Market valuations across both equities and fixed income are attractive, but a patient stance is required with likely near-term choppiness ahead.”

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