Analysis-China investment consensus cracks as politics fuel fears

By Tom Westbrook

SINGAPORE (Reuters) -Decades-long foreign bullishness on China's capital markets is breaking down, investment flows and interviews with fund managers suggest, with a new era of uncertainty fuelled by geopolitical risks and U.S. investors especially wary.

There have been ample excuses to buy China as the world's second biggest economy gathers steam.

Post-pandemic recoveries in exports, property and shopping have run harder than expected. Stock market returns are solid. Jack Ma's reappearance and plans to break up his Alibaba empire were also seen as ending a few years of regulatory crackdowns.

But big, long-term foreign investors, are missing. Their absence, and asset managers' reasons for it, reveal a wariness in the investment community over how to price new risks for capital as China becomes a great power and a great U.S. rival.

It is unlikely to be resolved quickly even if the markets keep rallying and China economy keeps global growth ticking.

"It's around capital preservation, not really the returns," said Hayden Briscoe, Asia-Pacific head of multi-asset portfolio management, at UBS Asset Management in Hong Kong.

"Foreign money at the moment, particularly from the U.S., is reluctant to invest," said Briscoe. He himself is positive on China, but said many managers are steering clear after seeing wartime sanctions erase the value of Russian investments.

"(They are) still looking at geopolitical risk and the Russia experience recently probably makes them more tentative than they normally are."

Data paints a murky picture, but supports brokers' analysis that the bid from long-only money managers is absent.

Flows figures show net foreign buying of about 188 billion yuan ($27 billion) this year. That is large, but most of that was crowded into January when "fast money" hedge funds were riding momentum as COVID rules relaxed and markets rallied.

Allocation analysis from data firm EPFR shows a broad downtrend, especially to U.S.-domiciled China funds. Allocation to those hit a record low last October and has been falling on an annual basis for four years, EPFR figures show.

HSBC research says global funds are underweight on China and Bank of America has noted the effect on market dynamics.

"Without the long term anchoring investors, the H-share market becomes more volatile, driven by the ins-and-outs of 'quick money'," said Bank of America's chief China equity analyst Winnie Wu after surveying some 30 Hong Kong funds.

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