Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
11 December 2013
GEM Equity Strategy Outlook 2014
Still bearish on China
Positive sentiment overdone given risks of debt trap in
corporate sector and local government
Ongoing deterioration in China leaf ROTC undermines growth prospects
As regular readers will be only too aware, our negative view on both the
Chinese economy and equity market derives from a micro-level perspective of
the structure and returns of the corporate sector. For the past three years. we
have been using the CROCI data provided by Francesco Curto and his team in
which they analyse the real level of cash returns from about 68% of the MSCI
non-financial universe as an advance warning of the extent to which
productivity is deteriorating throughout the broader economy (Figure 32 and
Figure 33). So far this appears to be working - most economists, including
DB's own senior Asian economist, Michael Spencer, now acknowledge the
extent to which the incremental capital to output ratio (ICOR) has deteriorated
since the financial crisis, as the Chinese authorities have thrown capital at the
economies in a so far successful attempt to maintain growth at what they
deem to be an acceptable level. According to rating agency Fitch, the level of
debt to GDP has risen by around eighty percentage points since the middle of
2008.
[Figure 32: China ex-financials - CROCI
16%
14%
12%
10%
0
9%
0%
4%
2%
0%
1997
1999
2001
2033
2005
2007
2039
2011
SOWS PS*
OTOCI fawn
CROCI 4:Goods..
CROCI own Goorlwot -.—COC
• imp144
CROCI
Figure 33: China ex-financials - CROCI drivers
35%
30%
•
e •
••••
ow.
0 70.
'+r
dm.
0.e0.
0 50,
20%
40.
15%
mom
030.
10%
0.10.
5%-
0.10c
0%
o.
1997
1999
1001
1003
1035
2007
MO
1011
.
.
1013E
-CROCI CS'
flew M14 VIP^
Scaoc• Onsche tont GROG nom
Dysfunctional relationship between local government & corporate sector
The dysfunctional relationship between local government and the corporate
sector is the underlying cause of much of the misallocation of resources in
China in our view. Asa result of the 1994 fiscal reforms, local government is
chronically underfunded as tax revenues are inadequate to meet social and
other expenditure obligations. At the same time, local government has been
able to exert a relatively high degree of control over locally-based industrial
enterprises and the local branches of state-controlled banks. One consequence
is that wherever possible, local governments have subsidised costs for industry
using household savings or what are nominally centrally controlled resources
to maintain high levels of local employment and growth. This has had the
effect of dragging down returns across almost all of the industrial and
materials sector via overcapacity and diverting resources away from potentially
more productive uses, thus undermining the potential growth rate for the
entire economy.
Deutsche Bank AG/London
••••• •S•1•• /Grout Caplol Inveowl
Page 21
CONFIDENTIAL — PURSUANT TO FED. R. CRIM. P. 6(e)
DB-SDNY-0107155
CONFIDENTIAL
SDNY_GM_00253339
EFTA01451035