Analysis-Dividend surge signals culture shift in China's markets
An investor looks at his mobile phone in front of a board showing stock information at a brokerage office in Beijing · Reuters

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By Jiaxing Li and Ankur Banerjee

HONG KONG/SINGAPORE (Reuters) - New shades of capitalism are emerging in China's tuckered out stock market as companies, at Beijing's behest, buy back their shares and pay record dividends to investors lying in wait for a so-far evasive rebound.

Investors say the record spree of share buybacks and dividend payouts mark a cultural shift in the market, turning the spotlight on shareholder returns akin to the ongoing corporate governance makeover in Japan.

The dividend yield on Chinese stocks has risen to around 3%, the highest since 2016, rewarding investors who have bravely stayed invested in a market that has been limp for years and faces more stress after Donald Trump's return as U.S. president.

"China's regulators and policymakers are trying to engineer this culture of shareholder return," said Jason Lui, head of Asia-Pacific equities and derivatives strategy at BNP Paribas.

"If that can be successfully engineered, it will change the makeup of the capital market, and you've seen some early sign of that," referring to increased shareholder returns.

The buybacks and dividends were introduced as part of proposals by Chinese authorities in September to lift stock prices and boost consumer sentiment.

The benchmark CSI 300 index has struggled in recent years, down more than 27% since 2021 against a 65% rise for the S&P 500. The market value of Chinese stocks has stagnated for a decade at around $11 trillion.

Lingering concerns over the indebted property sector, deflationary pressures, lack of big stimulus and geopolitical tensions have hurt sentiment, causing a foreign investment exodus. The threat of tariffs from Trump is another worry.

Even after Beijing showed willingness to boost the market in September, stock prices have lost momentum. The CSI300 index surged 40% in the two weeks after the first stimulus announcements but disappointment with the degree and pace of implementation has seen gains halve since then.

"The simple way to look at it, you should be paid enough of a dividend ... for you to take the pain of the fact that the recovery might not happen in valuations," said Bhaskar Laxminarayan, chief investment officer for Asia at Julius Baer.

"You're being paid for that patience. If you're not, then it's not worth it."

BIG DATA

Chinese firms distributed dividends totalling a record 2.4 trillion yuan ($329.7 billion) in 2024. Share buybacks too rose to a record high 147.6 billion yuan last year, data from regulators showed.