China’s ongoing stock rebound will probably be sustained for three
months as policymakers’ recent measures to boost investment play out to
stabilise growth, according to UBS Group.To get more
china market news, you can visit shine news official website.
Cyclical
stocks, or companies whose earnings are most reliant on the economic
cycles, would lead the bounce and the CSI 300 Index of Chinese big-caps
would rise 14 per cent by the year end, said Gao Ting, a strategist with
the biggest Swiss bank at a briefing in Shanghai on Tuesday.
The CSI
300 Index of the 300 largest companies on the mainland’s two exchanges
has risen 3 per cent after tumbling to a 23-month low on Friday. The
bounce was spurred by the government’s pledge to spend more on
infrastructure projects and the call for commercial banks to boost
lending. Still, the gauge remains down 17 per cent this year as the
worst performer among the world’s major stock markets, as China’s trade
war with the US escalates and a deleveraging move to cut corporate debts
deepens.
“These measures will have an effect at last in the short
term and can stabilise growth,” Gao said. “You don’t need to doubt about
that. The market will have some upside room to run.”
UBS has set a
year-end target of 3,800 for the big caps gauge, and earnings growth for
the companies on the measure are estimated to reach 5 per cent in the
following 12 months, according to the Swiss bank.
Cyclical companies
such as railway builders were likely to outperform the other sectors in
the rebound, while the previous sell-off offered a long-term buying
opportunity for pharmaceutical and consumer companies, Gao said, without
naming specific stocks.UBS is avoiding property developers, building
material makers and brokerages, as curbs on rising home prices are set
to take its toll on sales and the ongoing financial deleveraging will
hurt earnings.
The Swiss bank was bullish on consumer staple stocks,
because the industry consolidation raises the pricing power for big
players, said Christine Peng, an analyst tracking the consumer industry
at UBS in a separate briefing.
Peng said investors should avoid
consumer-discretionary companies including carmakers and home appliance
manufacturers, as declining home prices could reduce the wealth effect
among Chinese citizens, and the recent collapse of peer-to-peer lending
platforms have hurt some investors.
The Wall