Source of Article: Bloomberg
Chinese shares may rise as much as 35% next year as the yuan strengthens and earnings growth accelerates, according to Greenwoods Asset Management, manager of this year’s best-performing Chinese long-short equity fund.
According to Greenwood's Hong Kong office head Joseph Zeng, the gains by A shares denominated in yuan in Shanghai and Shenzhen will probably exceed a forecast increase of as much as 30% for mainland companies’ H shares traded in Hong Kong. Zeng's prediction is that China shares will extend gains as they have yet to enter a speculative “bubble”, and now trade at about 24 times estimated earnings, below the 10-year average of 35 times. In addition, China will probably yield to pressure from trading partners by allowing the yuan to appreciate by between 4% and 6% by end-2010, easing imbalances that worsened the global economic crisis.
The Shanghai Composite Index has jumped more than 8-% this year, as the government implemented a four trillion yuan stimulus package and allowed banks to lend beyond targets to support an expansionary monetary policy.
However, the US$1.3 trillion credit boom and a revival in the property market have triggered warnings about possible asset bubbles by officials and investors. Zeng on the other hand believes that overall property market isn’t in bubble territory yet either, because the “big gains” in prices were mainly confined to major cities.
According to Zeng, Greenwoods’ US$174 million Golden China Fund has 30% of its portfolio in A shares. The fund favours companies whose A shares are trading at lower valuations than their H shares. It also likes companies with “compelling valuations” in industries that are under-represented in Hong Kong, including Hundsun Electronics Co, which develops software for financial companies.
The Golden China Fund, which invests in A shares, H shares and American depositary receipts of Chinese companies, rose 137% year to date as of Oct 31, the best return among Chinese long-short equity funds, according to data from Bloomberg and the company. It also has the highest total return over one year, three years and five years among 37 peers tracked by Bloomberg.
Friday, December 4, 2009
China Stocks To Rally In 2010?
Labels:
investing 101,
stock market basics
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
Nice post, it is very interesting to hear "China Stocks To Rally In 2010?, thats great.
thanks for sharing.
Tax preparer
Thank you for your feedback. Thanks for visiting.
Post a Comment