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RPT-COLUMN-Peak China gloom or geopolitical quagmire?: Mike Dolan

(Repeats article that ran on Sept. 12 with no changes to text)

By Mike Dolan

LONDON, Sept 13 (Reuters) - Whether China has become "uninvestable" or not, avoidance of the world's second-largest economy suggests the economic and political risks there have simply become too hard to assess.

U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo's trip to China last month had promised some economic and trade detente between the two superpowers now at loggerheads. But it was quickly defined by her comment that more and more U.S. firms see China as "uninvestable" amid spying, fines, raids and other risks. While bricks-and-mortar investment, supply-chain exposure and stock listings have been under a spotlight since the pandemic, portfolio flows have been balking at prospects as well.

Fear of a systemic property bust, a disappointing post-COVID economic recovery and piecemeal government supports all raise red flags over returns and performance over the near term and the yuan slide has accelerated.

But rancorous geopolitics and related bilateral investment curbs in sensitive technology and security-related sectors kick many long-term value plays or contrarian trades into touch too.

As some reflection of that, Bank of America's global fund manager survey this week spotlighted the extent to which all those fears are translating into investment positioning.

Net allocations to China-dominated emerging market equities "collapsed" 25 percentage points over the past month to their lowest of the year - the largest monthly decline in exposure in almost seven years.

A third of respondents in the survey cited Chinese real estate as the biggest "credit event risk", overtaking nerves about U.S. and EU commercial real estate.

And none of the 222 funds polled expected China economic growth to be any higher next year than this - mirroring a recent Reuters survey of domestic and overseas banks and investors.

Perhaps most significantly, the dour China-led emerging markets outlook was independent of an improving global growth picture overall - with a rise in exposure to U.S. equity this month the biggest in the survey's history and the first net overweight position since August 2022.

The net shift from emerging markets to Wall St was also the largest in the 20-plus years of the poll.

As these sorts of surveys go, there's an awful lot in there that could spell "peak gloom". Investment skews of this scale are often good contrarian indicators.

Indeed, shorting China equities was deemed the second "most crowded trade" behind long exposure to supercharged Big Tech stocks.