The A-share market in the Chinese mainland is
expected to pull back in the fourth quarter of this year after growth
momentum peaked in the first half of the year, UBS Securities said.
The investment firm bet on reform-related sectors, including State-owned
enterprises (SOEs), flagship businesses in heavy industries and green
stocks that align with the country's structural reforms.
Bolstered by strong economic fundamentals, the mainland's blue-chip CSI
300 Index has risen from a level slightly above 3,300 in May to 3829.87
at the close of trade on Thursday.
The 3,341 listed companies on the two major exchanges in Shanghai and
Shenzhen reported combined revenue of 18.12 trillion yuan ($2.75
trillion), up 24.1 percent year-on-year, according to financial data
provider eastmoney.com.
Despite slowing investment, especially in real-estate, UBS Securities
chief China strategist Gao Ting said strong growth in exports and
improved domestic performance have sent the A-share market to new highs
in the first eight months of the year.
The National Bureau of Statistics said export values rose 11.3 percent
in June, a significant recovery from the 6.1 percent decline in December
last year. Retail sales of consumer goods rose 10.4 percent in July.
Looking ahead, UBS is less sanguine about prospects as improvement in
economic fundamentals was well priced in during the first three quarters
of the year.
The investment bank forecast the CSI 300 Index would stand at 3,750 at
the end of this year. The high growth rate of corporate earnings is also
expected to moderate. UBS predicts earnings of listed companies will
grow a mild 5 percent in the fourth quarter and maintains a full-year
growth prediction of 12 percent.
Investor preferences will shift from blue chips to reform-related
stocks, Gao noted. UBS also stated the government's advocacy of SOEs'
mixed-ownership reform, trimming of overcapacity in heavy industry and
incremental efforts in environment protection are making related stocks
new investment hot spots.
Earlier last month, China United Network Communication Group Ltd, the
country's second-largest mobile network operator, announced a
mixed-ownership reform plan. Mainland internet giants Alibaba Group
Holding Ltd, Baidu Inc, Tencent Holdings Ltd and JD.com Inc will take
stakes in the Hong Kong listed SOE.
"The mixed ownership reform of China Unicom is a good start and rolling
out the blueprint for other SOEs. I think the reform would expedite and
investors will have increasing interests in SOEs experimenting with such
reforms," Gao said.
In terms of the outlook for the renminbi, Gao thinks the recent wave of
appreciation is mainly due to the weakening of the US dollar rather than
the strong momentum of the yuan. The yuan strengthened and breached the
psychologically important 6.60 per dollar level at the end of last
month-the first time at that level since June last year.
"The introduction of countercyclical factor in exchange-rate reform has
set the yuan against a basket of major currencies. We estimate the
exchange rate of the yuan against the US dollar will remain below 6.80
this year," Gao said.
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Booming A-share Market Expected To Throttle Back
Sep 12, 2017
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