China Downplays Big Stimulus In 2024, Testing Investor Patience

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Li Qiang, China's premier, delivers a special address on the opening day of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland

Chinese Premier Li Qiang gave his clearest signal yet that Beijing won't resort to huge stimulus to revive growth amid the worst bout of deflation in decades. Another batch of troubling data is testing the patience of investors who worry Beijing is behind the curve.

Speaking to leaders at the World Economic Forum this week, Li trumpeted his nation's ability to hit its roughly 5% growth target last year without flooding the economy with “massive stimulus.” While data Wednesday confirmed that economic goal, it also showed China recording its worst deflationary streak since the Asian Financial Crisis. Home prices fell last month by the most since 2015, underscoring the scale of the property downturn. 

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In portraying the economy's trajectory as a success, Li stressed that officials did “not seek short-term growth while accumulating long-term risk” — a veiled reference to Beijing's old methods of powering growth by borrowing heavily and funding the now-overheated real estate sector.

“Authorities don't want to give the impression that they are very worried about growth, and they want to try to see the economy through 2024 without significant stimulus,” said Louis Kuijs, chief economist for Asia Pacific at S&P Global Ratings. “There is a risk that they are underplaying the downward pressures on the economy.”

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While “bazooka-style” stimulus helped lift the economy out of the global financial crisis more than a decade ago, that debt-fueled expansion led to overcapacity and saddled many local governments with huge financial burdens. Now the ruling Communist Party has to figure out what kind of stimulus — and how much — can help it successfully fend off a deflationary spiral, put a floor under the real estate crisis and create sustainable development.

Chinese-listed stocks in the US fell after Li's comments in Davos, Switzerland on Tuesday. Following the release of the economic data Wednesday, the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index notched its worst day since October 2022. A benchmark for mainland equities slid as foreigners dumped the largest amount of shares in more than a year.

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With key benchmarks in Hong Kong close to wiping out all gains seen since the late 2022 reopening frenzy, traders are scrambling to find the bottom of the rout. Global funds from the US to Australia are increasingly distancing themselves as doubts over Beijing's long-term economic agenda drive a structural shift away from what was once a must-have market. 

Li seems “to indicate that he is confident China can keep this growth rate without stimulus. I don't think it will be easy,” said Alicia Garcia Herrero, chief Asia-Pacific economist at Natixis SA.

While the People's Bank of China took steps last month to pump cash into the financial system, it bucked widespread expectations for cutting a key policy rate on Monday. 

“They need to cut rates if they want to reach 5% growth” this year, Garcia Herrero said, adding that China risks making the same mistakes as the Bank of Japan did in not reacting to deflation in the early 1990s, when that nation was beset by a prolonged period of poor economic growth. “They need to move.”

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The government mulling other tools. Bloomberg News reported this week that China is considering issuing 1 trillion yuan ($139 billion) in ultra long sovereign bonds, a sign policymakers are trying to shift more debt from local to central budgets.

Major Chinese lender Ping An Bank Co. has put 41 developers on a list of builders eligible for its funding support, after adjusting its loan criteria, according to people familiar with the matter. The development offers a fresh example of how financial firms are responding to Beijing's stepped up efforts to ease a cash crunch among builders.

Property is a major overhang on the economy. Real estate investment fell 9.6% last year from 2022. Housing new starts — a key gauge of confidence among developers — plunged 20.9%. The drop in property investment “has definitely not reached the bottom,” said Jacqueline Rong, chief China economist at BNP Paribas SA, who called the sector the “biggest downward pressure on the economy.”

Despite the stunning growth in new manufacturing sectors such as EVs, they still don't contribute enough to the overall economy to completely replace property as a key growth driver. 

“With investment in the property sector falling, the economy is more dependent on the manufacturing sector and service sector,” said Zhang Zhiwei, president and chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management. “This transition will take time to be accomplished.”

In the meantime, the focus is turning to how much stimulus the government will rely on to fill insufficient demand. More forceful fiscal policies may mean the country sets a higher budget fiscal deficit and issues more debt. 

What Bloomberg Economics Says ... 

“Soft December activity and the first rise in the jobless rate in five months drove home the message that weakness could extend into 2024 unless policy support is stepped up. The government is already turning up the fiscal throttle — and we expect stronger policy steps, especially on the fiscal side, in coming months.”

— Chang Shu and David Qu, economists

Read the full report here.

The size of the sovereign debt issuance under consideration, for example, would be relatively limited: China's economy overall is worth 126 trillion yuan. Rolling out such a program may be more reflective of the nation's desire to shift debt burdens away from over-leveraged local governments than it is about juicing the economy through big stimulus. 

The central bank, meanwhile, recently turned to other tools, such as providing low-cost funds to policy-oriented banks to finance housing and infrastructure projects. 

Policymakers still have scope to take action later in 2024 by reducing interest rates and reserve requirement ratios for banks. But the PBOC is somewhat constrained as the Federal Reserve has urged caution against expecting rate cuts in the US anytime soon. 

“This is what we call reactive easing,” said Robin Xing, chief China economist at Morgan Stanley, in an interview with Bloomberg TV. “They need a more decisive shift to active easing to break this debt-deflation loop.”

--With assistance from Jiyeun Lee, Tom Hancock and Iris Ouyang.

(Updates with additional details on Ping An Bank's extended funding.)

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

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