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Zhang Kun, China’s biggest money manager, issues stock valuation warning, says days of fast economic growth are gone

  • Zhang, a Guangzhou-based fund manager at E Fund Management, says investors should not overestimate ‘capability of judging non-consensus sustained high growth’
  • Zhang’s blue-chip fund dropped 21 per cent in net asset value last year for a third straight annual decline

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A large screen showing the latest stock exchange and economic data is reflected in a shop window in Shanghai, in this file photo from January. Photo: EPA-EFE
Zhang Shidongin Shanghai

Investors should exercise more caution when it comes to the valuations of Chinese stocks, as corporate earnings growth is set to slow because of Beijing’s pursuit of high-quality economic growth, according to China’s biggest money manager.

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The base probability of sustainable high-quality growth at companies is falling and a valuation premium will not be justifiable, unless a company is riding an industry boom and holds an overwhelming edge over rivals, Zhang Kun, a Guangzhou-based fund manager at E Fund Management, said in an annual report.

Zhang’s flagship fund, which managed net assets worth 41.7 billion yuan (US$5.8 billion) as of the end of last year, was larger than any other stock-focused fund operating on the Chinese mainland, Bloomberg data shows.

“We shouldn’t overestimate our capability of judging non-consensus sustained high growth,” he said in the report. “We will seriously consider companies’ valuations when they are placed in the illiquid primary market, and very prudently offer premiums.”

The report underscores the challenges of investing in the world’s second-largest economy, with the days of fast growth long gone as the economy transitions to one that Beijing hopes will be more reliant on technological self-sufficiency. Zhang’s views also pour cold water on calls by some investors that China’s stocks are cheap enough now to embark on a bull run and reverse a three-year decline.

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The CSI 300 Index is currently valued at 12.9 times earnings, against an average of 17.9 times since 2005, and about half the multiples for the S&P 500 Index and the Nikkei 225, according to Bloomberg data. The multiple for the Hang Seng Index in Hong Kong is 8.2 times, the second-cheapest among key markets globally.

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