The Worst Mistake China Stock Investors Can Make Right Now

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The last year has been rough for investors in China stocks.

U.S. tariffs against the world's second-biggest economy and the ongoing trade war with China, along with concerns about slowing growth in the Chinese economy, have weighed on Chinese stocks. The Shanghai Composite fell 25% last year on those concerns, and though it's recouped some of those losses this year on earlier hopes for a resolution, the index is still down more than 10% from where it was at the start of 2018.

Despite valid concerns about China's slowing economic growth and a potentially full-blown trade war, the worst mistake long-term investors in China stocks can make at this point is to sell their shares in Chinese companies. Here's why:

American and Chinese cash bills overlapping each other.
American and Chinese cash bills overlapping each other.

Image source: Getty Images.

China is still seeing huge growth

President Trump imposed 10% tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese imports last September, and raised that rate to 25% in May, in addition to threatening to levy import taxes on an additional (estimated) $300 billion in Chinese imports.

Nonetheless, China's economy has continued to expand in the face of the new tariffs and the additional threats, and as some American companies have moved production out of China to places like Vietnam, India, and Mexico -- although that shift appears to be at least partly caused by rising labor costs in China.

China's GDP expanded by 6.4% in the first quarter, ahead of estimates of 6.3%, which was faster than almost any other major economy in the world. Meanwhile, China's biggest companies continue to see strong growth.

Alibaba (NYSE: BABA), China's biggest e-commerce company, said revenue jumped 51% in its most recent quarter to $13.9 billion, and gross merchandise volume (GMV) in its China marketplaces, a good proxy for overall retail spending in China, jumped 25% in the year ended March 31 to $853 billion.

Tencent (NASDAQOTH: TCEHY), the Chinese tech giant that owns the popular social media app WeChat and has a hand in everything from digital payments to online games, said revenue rose 16% to $12.7 billion in its first quarter.

Baidu (NASDAQ: BIDU), China's search giant, saw revenue from continuing operations increase 21% in its most recent quarter to $3.6 billion, and JD.com (NASDAQ: JD), China's biggest direct online retailer, said revenue rose 21% to $18 billion during the same period.

None of those companies look like they're feeling any significant cost from the trade war.

The news changes fast

Guessing what will happen in the U.S.-China trade war has become a fool's errand. Markets have moved back and forth at each new announcement, whether it's from President Trump, one of his deputies, or China, but often one piece of news is reversed as soon as the next week.