Macroscope | Why the glass-half-empty view of China’s economic recovery needs a rethink
- China’s domestic consumption-led recovery means that the spillover effects on the rest of the world are less pronounced
- The bleak US outlook has put China’s performance under close scrutiny, and Western business expectations are running ahead of reality
On May 3, the chief executive of Qualcomm, the largest producer of smartphone processors, said the expectation was that “following the reopening, the China market was going to bounce back” but “we have not seen those signs yet”.
Even hospitality and consumer goods companies are sounding a note of caution. On April 26, the chief executive of Hilton said “China has been a little bit slower to … pick up steam on the development side”, while on May 2, the chief financial officer of Starbucks said “there’s a lot that we’re navigating” in China, adding that the coffee chain expected its business in the country to grow “at a more moderate pace” later this year.
Indeed, according to the findings of Bank of America’s latest global fund manager survey, published on April 18, an overweight position in Chinese stocks – which remain cheap compared with their US peers – was still one of the most popular trades in markets.
Yet, there is a palpable lack of confidence about the strength and durability of China’s rebound among many Western companies and financial institutions. Ever since China abruptly scrapped its zero-Covid policy, a glass-half-empty view of the recovery has held sway, with its weaknesses overshadowing its strengths.