Investors see Chinese stocks in a new light

Institutional investors are beginning to see Chinese stocks differently. After months of selling, global investors have again become net buyers of Chinese stocks — for the first time since March.
Catch up: Why are Chinese stocks down so drastically?
Low valuations, supportive government policies, improving earnings and lockdowns easing — per the Investment Director of GAM, Jian Shi Cortesi (BBG).
The majority of citizens in Shanghai are out of a two-month COVID-19 lockdown, and “when you remove restrictions you can see a really strong bounce,” per Insight Investment Head of Macro Research (FT).
In 2019, Trump imposed tariffs on $300B worth of Chinese imports. Biden is also reportedly considering ending tariffs on some of these Chinese imports to lower inflation.
As of Monday, DiDi Global is up 20% since the WSJ reported that China is concluding its regulatory probe on the company — which dragged it down over 80% in the past year.
In March, it was reported that China would complete its tech crackdown “as soon as possible.” Investors didn’t know how serious those claims were — but according to Bloomberg analylst Marvin Chen, the investigation into DiDi is a “sign that regulators are following through” (BBG).
In May, JPMorgan said “the first batch of outperformers” would be in the digital entertainment, local services and e-commerce sectors (CNBC).
Dive Deeper: This fund manager returned 30x over five years in his Chinese hedge fund — here’s his strategy.