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By Clive McDonnell
China’s National Party Congress, the sixth since modern China started to take shape in 1992, could mark a break from the past three leadership changeover cycles. Specifically, it could result in an extension of President Xi Jinping’s control over the party beyond the normal two five-year terms. Such an outcome would imply continuity and reaffirm the current trajectory of renewal in the Chinese economy.
With the exception of the Global Financial Crisis-induced credit expansion in the old economy sectors, China’s focus over the past ten years has been on building new champions in technology, transportation and consumer services. This marked a change from the prior generation of leadership which emphasised economic modernisation, with a focus on domestic champions in finance, materials and energy.
China has experienced continued growth in debt ratios over the past ten years, with the Institute of International Finance estimating the debt-to-GDP ratio reached 300% in mid 2007. This has coincided with a decline in the marginal return on each additional unit of debt as the economy has increased in size and the population has aged. The debt build-up has been primarily driven by companies in the old economy sectors, including some state-owned enterprises which are deemed as too big to fail.
Nevertheless, in contrast to economies in Japan, Europe and to a lesser extent the US, new growth drivers in China have emerged in the technology, transportation and consumer services sectors. The marginal return on investment in these sectors is increasing and they don’t have the same addiction to debt.
China’s technology leaders
If ‘big data’ generates competitive advantage for businesses in the first half of the 21st century, Chinese technology leaders have a unique advantage. China’s vast population has smartphone penetration and social media usage levels to give these companies a vast stream of data to analyse.
These technology leaders have access to the data to feed their algorithms to identify trends as they develop: tailor-making value-added solutions for their customers in the sharing economy, pioneering new forms of credit scoring and targeted video advertising.
China’s 3.0 generation of leadership understands the importance of creating new growth drivers to take over from the old economy behemoths. This was most recently reflected in the implicit approval of foreign investment in the technology sectors, even as authorities clamped down against foreign direct investment by opaque domestic conglomerates.
While China’s domestic population of 1.4bn consumers is attractive, it is also protected, which could result in leading companies in the technology, transportation and consumer services sectors resting on their laurels. China’s One-Belt-One-Road (OBOR) initiative – which involves large-scale development of infrastructure along China’s centuries-old trade routes - is part of the solution to ensure this does not happen. For China’s companies in these sectors, OBOR offers a road map to tap into millennial consumers across Asia who have yet to commit to an eco system. Chinese companies have grabbed market share in the instant messaging, e-commerce and sharing economy across South and South East Asia. These markets, combined, offer a population size that is even bigger than China’s home market.
For international investors looking for the next big opportunity, China’s 2.0 companies offer plenty. Fortuitously for them, the pivot towards the new growth drivers guided by China’s 3.0 leaders takes place at a time when there are more opportunities to tap into them compared to prior phases of growth in China. During the 1990s growth spurt, foreign investors did not have easy access to rapidly growing companies in the finance, materials and energy sectors as many were unlisted. Today, there are a broad range of listed companies in the technology, transportation and consumer services sectors accessible to investors based in the US, UK and Hong Kong.
(The writer is Head of Equity Strategy at Standard Chartered Private Bank.)