Credit Suisse - 'The Chinese equity market should therefore be closely monitored this summer'
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, 06-09-2015 at 09:37 PM (1340 Views)
Whether China shares are in a bubble depends on which data bit catches the fancy, but the market has outstripped its fundamentals and is 23 percent overbought, Credit Suisse said.
"Margins, profitability and value creation continue declining as productivity growth lags real wage growth and product selling prices are eroded," Credit Suisse said in a note Friday.
"Moreover, equity market price momentum has decoupled away from earnings revisions which remain deeply embedded in negative territory."
Its models indicate the market is 23 percent overbought and has potential downside of 15 percent in U.S. dollar terms by year-end.
Whether China shares are in a bubble depends on which data bit catches the fancy, but the market has outstripped its fundamentals and is 23 percent overbought, Credit Suisse said.
"Margins, profitability and value creation continue declining as productivity growth lags real wage growth and product selling prices are eroded," Credit Suisse said in a note Friday.
"Moreover, equity market price momentum has decoupled away from earnings revisions which remain deeply embedded in negative territory."
Its models indicate the market is 23 percent overbought and has potential downside of 15 percent in U.S. dollar terms by year-end.
Read More China's see-saw ride? Don't sweat it.
The mainland's shares have rallied sharply this year, despite a brief drop into correction territory last week. The Shanghai Composite is up around 50 percent year-to-date, even after last week's one-day 6.5 percent plunge. The Shenzhen Composite is up around 111 percent year-to-date.
Credit Suisse attributes the rally to factors including the People's Bank of China injecting liquidity through its easing measures, retail investors re-allocating assets to stocks and away from bank savings, wealth management products and property. Apart from some restrictions on margin trading, the securities regulator also appears to be letting the rally ride, the bank noted.
"Looking at the market cap to GDP (gross domestic product) ratio as a measure of risk in equity markets, it now seems to us that the recent sharp rise in the Chinese market is the first sign of a bubble without the support of fundamentals," Societe Generale said in a note Monday. The ratio grew by 124 percent over the past 12 months, similar to the climb in 2006-2007, it noted.
"The Chinese equity market should therefore be closely monitored this summer," it said.
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