Trump driving a wedge between Indian and Chinese stocks

epa05523391 Chinese President Xi Jinping (R) welcomes Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi (L) for the G20 Summit in Hangzhou, China, 04 September 2016. The G20 Summit is held in Hangzhou on 04 to 05 September.  EPA/HOW HWEE YOUNG

 

A third strongman has managed to do what the two before him couldn’t: Sever the link between the stock markets of China and India.
The correlation between the CSI 300 and the Nifty 50 indexes survived Xi Jinping’s ascent to power in 2012 and Narendra Modi’s election in 2014. Donald Trump, however, has succeeded in driving through a wedge. The link between equity prices of the world’s two most-populous economies is now the weakest since at least the 2008 financial crisis.
In some ways, the decoupling predates the US presidential election. Markets that ebb and flow in tandem 30 to 40% of the time had developed minds of their own by the time Britain voted to leave the European Union last summer.
However, correlations are supposed to be mean-reverting. The continued divergence of China and India this year, with the Nifty’s 21% jump in dollar terms overshadowing a 5% gain in the CSI 300, shows that Trump’s policies may be prolonging the separation.
It isn’t that investors have become relatively more bullish on Indian earnings compared with those in China. On a price-earnings basis, the Nifty has on average enjoyed a 40% premium over the CSI 300 since early 2012. The gap, which widened to almost 100% when Modi’s election
as Indian prime minister started to look like a cinch, is
currently 29%.
Even so, every gain in the Indian benchmark is making investors sceptical. A friendless rally, as Gadfly has argued, is good for the market because it’s keeping investors focused on how, for example, Trump’s proposed clampdown on H-1B work visas would hurt India’s software exports. But companies like Tata Consultancy Services Ltd. and Infosys Ltd. are anyway stoking the embers of a dying industry. What’s not getting enough attention is the impact of the other Trump
proposal: tax reforms.
Now, a 15% US corporate tax rate is probably a chimera, but if the ultimate political compromise in Washington is for a meaningful reduction in what companies pay, the lift to their profitability is bound to make them search for growth markets.
As New Delhi’s own tax reforms pave the way for a common domestic market of 1.25 billion people, some of those US investments could head to India.

India is ripe for a wave of takeovers
From e-commerce to finance and payments, there’s no Indian industry with a settled hierarchy of dominant local players like China’s Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., Tencent Holdings Ltd. and Baidu Inc. A new wave of mergers and acquisitions is just starting, and everything is fair game. What’s not obviously on offer —like the family jewels of overstretched, unprofitable companies —will eventually go to the likes of KKR & Co.
Given China’s mountain of corporate debt, a property-led economic recovery there can’t last very long: Even the current business cycle upswing may be on its last legs.
Xi is backing the One Belt-One Road initiative to buy some insurance against a more protectionist Trump, even though the risk of a border adjustment tax is receding.
While India has a massive jobs deficit, the almost 6% gain in the rupee this year suggests that becoming the next factory to the world with the help of a cheap currency is not on Modi’s wish list. That’s one more reason why a recoupling of the Chinese and Indian markets is unlikely to happen soon.

— Bloomberg

Andy Mukherjee is a Bloomberg Gadfly columnist covering industrial companies and financial services. He previously was a columnist for Reuters Breakingviews. He has also worked for
the Straits Times, ET NOW and Bloomberg News

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