Most prominent is the fear that the Chinese government’s refusal to condemn the Russian invasion and its potential willingness to respond favorably to Russian requests for help may trigger a hostile response from the West, led by the US. In this narrative, China and Chinese companies would face wide-ranging sanctions, which could culminate in Chinese assets no longer being investable.
Markets appear also to think that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine increases the odds that China may attempt to seize control of Taiwan and risk a military standoff with the US. In parallel, Chinese assets are being penalized for what appears to be increased regulatory unpredictability and growing unease about the economic damage caused by China’s zero-COVID policy as authorities struggle to keep control of a fast-spreading outbreak.
Many of these worries may well be valid. Indeed, some of these concerns, such as the increasing friction between China and the US, are long-standing but have now become headline news. However, I worry that the situations of Russia and China may now get conflated. This, in my view, is a false parallel: China is clearly not Russia.
The most obvious difference I would argue is “action” versus “conjecture.” Russia shocked the world by invading a sovereign country, and the consequences of this act for financial assets could be reasonably anticipated. While the laundry list of worries in relation to China warrant close monitoring, they are, for now, still in the realm of conjecture. They may or may not happen. Moreover, for each concern it is possible to construct a plausible positive counternarrative that suggests staying invested and “leaning in” may be a better alternative. For instance, the difficulties faced by Russia’s military campaign may make an invasion of Taiwan less likely, while the fact that the Chinese economy is so intertwined with the West could force both parties to come to some understanding. Conversely, some risks such as the impact of COVID on the Chinese economy may still be underestimated.
Ultimately, the puzzle that investors need to solve is to what extent risks are priced in and whether they now get sufficiently compensated for the risk. In truth, there is no easy answer, particularly given the importance of China to the global economy and emerging markets.
Some might say “no way, not me” while others might be more willing to explore whether the risk/reward balance has sufficiently tipped in their favor. Which way one answers this question depends on personal risk appetite, client expectations, investment horizon, and knowledge of the assets in question.
Personally, I believe it is important to keep in mind that the range of outcomes is still just that — a range. Nobody knows what is going to happen. Sure, there are plenty of opinions and predictions, but serious risk management is not one sided. Reducing risk right now by selling Chinese assets might turn out to be a large, risky bet. Those of us who survived investing through the global financial crisis know that reducing “risk” into the end of 2008 became extremely risky when the calendar flipped to 2009.
I don’t know if this is the same situation here. All I am trying to do is keep an open and rational mind and not let the headlines force my hand into what might be a mistake that could take many years to reverse, while seeking to assess the long-term risk/reward equation and the potential range of outcomes.
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