Should investors head for China or India?
Guy Monson, Sarasin & Partners |
“If you want one year of prosperity, grow grain. If you want 10 years of prosperity, grow trees. If you want 100 years of prosperity, grow people” – Chinese Proverb.
Ironically, the biggest Achilles heel for the Indian and Chinese economy – their large population and the steady increase year on year, is now their greatest asset. A stark difference, however, exists.
China implemented a single child policy some years back and today faces an increasing dependence ratio. On the other hand, India still has very favourable demographics. The time has come for India to reap the rich “Demographic Dividend”.
India’s efforts in the last couple of decades to open up its economy have placed the 75 per cent of its population which is under age 35, and is largely educated and English speaking, on the global opportunities map.
Leading global names are ramping up offshore development centres in India, while Indian players are gobbling up client facing business across the globe. Both are looking to benefit from the cost arbitrage and scaling up possibilities that India has to offer.
Led by a quantum jump in personal disposable income, this change has made the population a potent consumption machine. Increasing incomes are leading to an unparalleled consumption explosion. Coupled with very low per capita incomes and consequent under penetration of most products, India is today perhaps the biggest latent demand market in the world.
Urbanisation and the subsequent advent of nuclear families is further fuelling demand for consumer products and infrastructure. In the next five years alone, total infrastructure investment is estimated at $475bn (E327bn). This will not only fuel direct growth but also indirectly build up related industries. We believe as India implements the required changes to investment policy in the coming years, this could lead to a hastening of FDI into the country, further accelerating GDP growth. Goldman Sachs, in its latest Bric update, estimates India to grow far more rapidly than China over the next 40 years to reach $15,000bn in GDP from the current $1,000bn.
The demographic advantage also ensured that India has very low dependence on global economic cycles. With exports still below 20 per cent of GDP, the country continues to be driven by domestic demand. This was clearly evident during the recent global financial crisis, during which large parts of the world slipped into recession but India slowed down only a couple of points to roughly 6.7 per cent GDP growth. In contrast, China has become a significant trading partner from Asia to the US and other developed countries, exposing it to volatility in growth of these economies.
A century old stock market, with more than 7,000 companies listed and a combined market cap of about $1,200bn, Indian equity markets are a trove of opportunity. With compounded average annual returns of 18 per cent plus over the last 30 odd years, the markets have had an enviable long-term track record. With more and more drivers to growth emerging, we find it difficult to believe these long-term returns can deteriorate sharply from here on.
The three broad themes that appear as key drivers to growth going forward are: domestic consumption, infrastructure investments and global outsourcing. Businesses that leverage off these opportunities are likely to do well.
The risks we see relate to the macro- environment, more particularly the fiscal deficit of the Government and high inflation and interest rates currently. An acceptable resolution of these issues is critical for the full potential of the economy to be realised.
Guy Monson, Sarasin & Partners |
China or India? If forced to choose one over the other, we would be biased towards the prospects for China. There are many arguments to be both positive and negative on China, but the question of the time horizon plays an important consideration. Obviously in the short-term there remain some lingering uncertainties. But the longer term macro outlook is pretty consensual, with expectations of China becoming the world’s largest economy in about 40 to 50 years.
The Chinese government’s attempt to cool the economy with various and numerous measures since late 2009 is synonymous with tapping on the brakes several times rather than slamming them on in one go. Talks of a hard landing have not happened. China’s inflation stands at about 5.2 per cent versus India’s 9 per cent. For China, food inflation accounts for 30 per cent of total CPI (consumer prices index), in India, 46 per cent. Core inflation in China stands at only about 2 per cent, and China ranks 27th versus India at 51st in terms of global productivity, according to the World Economic Forum.
With food price inflation a greater and immediate social threat in China than an economic one, any sort of case for China is weakened if the government fails to manage this problem. Slowing economic growth down to single digits without maintaining food price stability will still fail the overall objective. Fortunately, recent data on food prices point to a peaking.
Inefficient food distribution is a bottleneck and a primary cause of such inflation in many emerging countries. Between China and India, the former’s infrastructure is far superior. Improving India’s logistical infrastructure will help to ease such constraints, reduce inflation and increase economic growth rates, but the implementation of such projects has proven more difficult due to India’s political structure. The situation in China, being a one-party, centrally planned economy, allows such structural projects to move ahead much faster.
The discussion on China’s currency has also been hotly debated. This appreciation will be managed slowly, and we do not believe that the government will permit a haphazard, or big-bang approach simply because of pressure from the West.
China has Hong Kong, a prominent financial centre. At the same time, it is developing Shanghai as the on-shore equivalent. While access to mainland assets remains somewhat controlled, investors do have options, such as the China H-share and offshore CNH markets.
In the short-term, investments in public Chinese equities may be volatile due to the daily newsflow and opposing commentary in relation to some of the issues mentioned above. However, from a fundamental basis, market valuations are historically attractive for both China A and H shares. As government measures progressively cool the economy, steady growth should lead markets higher than where they are today.
The growth of the Chinese bond market has also begun to evolve and is growing larger each day. The evolution of a deeper and more liquid international Chinese bond market will only serve to raise its importance as an influential player in global capital markets.
Participating in China’s emergence is not limited to domestic Chinese assets. As the country continues to move from an investment to a consumption-driven economy, other options are available to tap the China growth story. The demand for luxury goods in China and the collection of Chinese arts and antiques provides alternative avenues. Indeed, resource-rich countries and related companies have also benefited greatly from China’s growth.