Xi’s backing turns state firms into China’s hottest stock trade
“The biggest policy surprise this year has been in SOE reforms, and it’s likely to stay a major play,” said Ou Xiao, fund manager at Stone PE in Shanghai. “There are plenty of ways to boost valuations, from incentive plans to asset injections, div...

A gauge of the largest government-backed stocks has gained 7% so far in 2023, outperforming the benchmark CSI 300 Index by nearly 5 percentage points and staying resilient amid a global banking rout. State firms accounted for half of the top 10 best-performing stocks on the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index, with eye-popping gains including China Satellite Communications Co.’s 118% surge and China Mobile Ltd.’s 49% jump.

“The biggest policy surprise this year has been in SOE reforms, and it’s likely to stay a major play,” said Ou Xiao, fund manager at Stone PE in Shanghai. “There are plenty of ways to boost valuations, from incentive plans to asset injections, dividends and stepping up corporate governance.”
China has a sprawling array of state firms, with the central government directly controlling 98 state behemoths that include top banks, mobile operators and energy producers. Investors, though, have at times viewed the sector as inefficient given their mandate to support social policies instead of prioritizing profits.
The renewed optimism in the sector first started late last year when China’s securities chief spoke of a “valuation system with Chinese characteristics” and suggested a new method of pricing companies. The rhetoric gathered pace this month during the National People’s Congress, when a senior securities official called for better funding conditions for SOEs while a regulator proposed a campaign to nurture global champions among them.
Currently, the CSI Central SOEs 100 Index trades at 10 times earnings as of Thursday, according to the index provider, versus 14 times for the broader CSI 300 Index. By comparison, the HSCEI is trading at 9.8 times earnings.

“The biggest risk is blindly following the crowd. As SOEs increasingly become the hottest trade, inevitably speculative stocks will emerge and there will be gains that are not supported by fundamentals,” said Hu Juncheng, general manager at Beijing Jiuyang Runquan Capital Management. “Investors will pay dearly for chasing after momentum without independent judgment of a firm’s value.”
Traders also are using the firms as a proxy trade for China’s geopolitical ambitions and policy goals. Shares of domestic state-run oil and construction firms rallied after Beijing helped restore diplomatic ties between Iran and Saudi Arabia, a development that highlights its growing influence in the Middle East.
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