China
Highlights Analysis on the Chinese property market is available below. In the Philippines, domestic demand is set to accelerate at the hands of the government’s fiscal boost. The current account deficit will widen and the peso and local bonds will likely sell-off. This warrants an underweight stance in this interest rate-sensitive bourse. A new trade: Pay 2-year swap rates. The outlook for China’s property market and construction activity is downbeat. Financial market plays leveraged to mainland construction activity remain at risk. The Philippines: The Cycle Is Turning The relative performance of Philippine equities against the EM benchmark is moving inversely to the direction of relative (Philippines minus EM) local bond yields (Chart I-1). When local Philippine bond yields drop versus those of other EMs, this bourse outperforms, and vice versa. Likewise, Philippine share prices in absolute terms exhibit a negative relationship with local bond yields (Chart I-2). The rationale behind this high sensitivity in share prices to local interest rates is the large presence of banks and property stocks in the Philippines' bourse. Banks account for 20% and real estate stocks another 21% of the local stock exchange. These sectors benefit in a falling interest rate environment and suffer during periods of rising rates. Chart I-1Philippines Vs. EM: Relative Stock Prices And Bond Yields Chart I-2Philippine Stocks Are Inversely Correlated To Domestic Bond Yields Our underweight position in Philippine equities has not played out because the economy has slowed much more than we had expected, which has also coincided with collapsing US Treasury bond yields. Consequently, Philippine local bond yields have plummeted, supporting the stock market’s absolute and relative performance. Chart I-3Philippine Growth Slowed Due To A Slump In Government Spending Chart I-4Negative Fiscal & Credit Impulse Stabilized The Current Account Deficit The growth rate of the Philippines has decelerated markedly due to sharp slowdowns in both government spending and bank loan growth (Chart I-3). In fact, the combined bank loan and fiscal spending impulse has plunged, leading to a major slowdown in domestic demand, which in turn has stabilized the current account (Chart I-4). The latter effect has supported the currency and allowed the central bank to cut rates. A budget deadlock on a number of items delayed the approval of the 2019 budget, causing government spending to plunge in the first half of 2019. In short, it was unintended fiscal tightening that has wrong-footed our view on the direction of the macro cycle, and consequently Philippine financial markets. Government spending has been instrumental in driving fixed capital formation since President Rodrigo Duterte came to power in May 2016. Philippine local bond yields have plummeted, supporting the stock market’s absolute and relative performance. Going forward, the macro cycle is set to reverse: Chart I-5Philippines: Signs Of A Growth Rebound Government expenditure will rise substantially – infrastructure spending in particular – lifting imports. The 2019 budget was approved back in April, and the House of Representatives has given the green light to extend the shelf-life of the current 2019 budget. Moreover, the fiscal 2020 budget, now approved by Duterte, entails 12% nominal growth in government expenditures in general and 14% growth in capital/infrastructure spending in particular. Duterte will oversee 100 flagship infrastructure projects estimated to cost 4.3 trillion Philippine pesos, or 24% of GDP. More than half of these projects are either ongoing or will commence construction in the next six to eight months. The larger infrastructure expenditure will encourage bank lending. Overall, domestic demand will revive considerably, causing the current account deficit to widen. Importantly, the expected fiscal boost will come on top of already strong consumer spending. The marginal propensity to spend among households and companies is already improving, confirming domestic growth acceleration (Chart I-5, top panel). In particular, both vehicle and machinery sales are recovering (Chart I-5, middle panel). Narrow and broad money impulses have bottomed (Chart I-5, bottom panel). Stronger imports amid still-depressed exports due to sluggish global demand will lead to a widening of the current account deficit. We expect the peso to resume its depreciation. Renewed currency weakness and a domestic demand revival will put a floor under inflation. The central bank is headed by Governor Benjamin Diokno, the former Budget Secretary and an associate of populist President Duterte. The odds are that the central bank will not hike interest rates in the face of a rising current account deficit and modestly rising inflation. This will reinforce currency depreciation. Finally, domestic bond yields are set to rise. A widening fiscal deficit has historically coincided with higher domestic bond yields (Chart I-6). Odds are it will not be different this time. Besides, Philippine banks have been relentlessly purchasing government bonds because credit demand from companies has been sluggish (Chart I-7). As private credit demand begins to recover and banks accelerate their loan origination, they will become net sellers – or will at least ease their pace of government bond purchases – pushing yields higher. Chart I-6Rising Fiscal Deficit Is Bad News For Bonds Chart I-7Philippine Commercial Banks Have Been Purchasing Government Bonds En Masse Bottom Line: Unintended fiscal tightening has slowed domestic demand, narrowed the current account deficit, supported the currency and induced a drop in local bond yields. This has allowed the Philippines’ interest rate-sensitive bourse to outperform the overall EM equity index. Going forward, the macro cycle is set to reverse. This cycle is about to reverse due to strong fiscal expansion: Domestic demand and imports will grow briskly, and the current account deficit will widen considerably. Widening twin deficits will lead to material currency depreciation and higher domestic bond yields. Investment Recommendations Continue shorting the Philippine peso versus the US dollar. 2-year swap rates are 48 basis points below the policy rate (Chart I-8). The market will price out rate cuts as the business cycle recovers and the currency depreciates. We recommend a new trade: pay 2-year swap rates. Dedicated EM fixed-income investors should underweight the Philippines in their EM domestic currency bonds and sovereign credit portfolios. Chart I-8The Market Is Expecting Rate Cuts Chart I-9Philippine Equity Market Is Not Cheap Does an upcoming growth revival warrant an overweight stance in Philippine stocks within an EM equity portfolio? As shown in Charts I-1 and I-2, this equity market is more sensitive to interest rates than growth. The growth deceleration did not prevent this stock market from outperforming its EM peers. Hence, higher local bond yields amid renewed currency depreciation will likely lead to a period of underperformance. Finally, Philippine stocks are not cheap in absolute terms or relative to the EM benchmark (Chart I-9). Hence, they will not respond well to rising interest rates. Chart I-10Philippine Property Stocks Will Suffer As Interest Rates Rise Within this bourse, underweight/short property stocks. These stocks are the most vulnerable to rising bond yields (Chart I-10). The key risks to our strategy are lower global bond yields and continuous flows of foreign capital into EM assets in general, and local bonds in particular. Ayman Kawtharani Editor/Strategist ayman@bcaresearch.com Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com China: Making Sense Of The Property Market Real estate activity in general, and property construction volumes in particular, are critical to our thesis of an ongoing growth slowdown in China. The basis is that construction volumes on the mainland have a considerable impact on industrial activity both within and outside China. On the structural front, housing demand is facing major headwinds: Genuine pent-up demand for housing has diminished. Most Chinese households already own at least one property. Based on a recent survey conducted by The Economic Daily,1 nearly 97% of households surveyed own at least one residential property. Last year’s China Household Finance Survey (CHFS), conducted by Southwestern University of Finance and Economics of China, showed about 68% of new homes sold in China’s urban areas in the first quarter of 2018 were purchased for the purpose of investment. In addition, the living area per capita in China’s urban areas has risen to 40 square meters as of the end of last year – larger than in South Korea and Japan. Other structural impediments include low affordability, slowing rural-to-urban migration, demographic changes and the promotion of the housing rental market. The government has been repeatedly stressing that China will not use the property market as a short-term economic growth-booster this time. The authorities will also continue to prevent speculative housing demand. Between late 2015 and 2017, the People's Bank of China undertook outright monetization of excess housing inventories via the Pledged Supplementary Lending (PSL) program. So far, even though the Chinese economy has already slowed considerably, the government has not injected much stimulus into the property market. On the contrary, the government has drastically reduced the number of slum-reconstruction units as well as its PSL injection this year. This year, the government has also started a new long-term project of renovating residential buildings built in 2000 or earlier. The projects involved include adding parking lots, elevators, fiber cable installments, electricity/gas line improvements, and so on. This renovation program will likely delay property purchases from those owners who were considering purchasing new properties instead of living in the older residential buildings. Chart II-1Property Sales In China: A Sustainable Recovery? From a cyclical perspective (6-12 months), falling home prices and relatively tight financing for property developers will likely prevent a recovery in construction activity: First, Chart II-1 shows there has recently been a pickup in residential property sales. Our research reveals that this has been the result of aggressive promotion strategies – price reductions – implemented by many real estate developers. Among the promotions being offered by many developers are “buy one property, get the second one at half price,” “buy a house and get a car for free,” or “buy a house and get free furniture and decorations.” Local governments have been “discouraging” outright property price declines. Yet, it seems they have allowed implicit price reductions to take place. In cases where outright price cuts cannot be avoided, the authorities try to limit them. Earlier this month, the government of Maanshan, a third-tier city in the Anhui province, released a rule instructing property developers not to lower prices by more than 10%. The outlook for China’s property market and construction activity is downbeat. As a result, official statistics on new housing prices do not truly reflect price pressures in the marketplace. Official statistics show new housing prices are rising at 9% since last year. Nevertheless, many 1st- and 2nd- tier cities are showing price declines in their secondhand residential property markets (Chart II-2). Chart II-2China: Secondary Market Property Prices Are Weak Chart II-3Chinese Property Developers: Massive Pre-Sold Homes, But Lack Of Funding To Complete Construction All in all, it seems that falling home prices have begun to spread from 1st tier cities to some 2nd- and 3rd-tier cities. The number of cities reporting declines in residential home prices is on the rise. Second, in theory, falling property prices should discourage new starts and new construction. Falling prices signal that supply is exceeding demand, with producers typically responding by curtailing output. This holds true for any industry. However, the intricacies of property developers in China may be different. Chart II-4Building Construction Data Is A Broader Measure Than Commodity Buildings Specifically, property developers have been pre-selling aggressively since 2017 while slowing their completion process due to lack of financing (Chart II-3). Such financial constraints arose due to their rapid expansion in the past 10 years. Having already incurred enormous amounts of leverage, they have resorted to pre-sales as another source of funding. Property developers are currently under pressure to deliver those units that were pre sold about two years ago. Will they be able to secure new funding and ramp up construction? Or will they default or delay delivery of houses? It may well be different for each developer. The ones with strong balance sheets and access to financing will build and deliver. The weakest ones will default, while the average ones will likely delay delivery. Hence, it is difficult to gauge construction trends in the next six months in the residential property market. Even so, it is unlikely to be very strong given the industry is highly fragmented, and many small and medium and even some large developers are financially weak. Finally, there is a large gap between the two construction activity datasets – both published by the National Bureau of Statistics. These datasets are referred to as “commodity buildings” and “building construction” (Chart II-4). “Commodity buildings” – i.e., those developed by real estate developers (the equivalent of homebuilders in the US), are only a subset of “building construction.” The “building construction” dataset is more comprehensive. It includes not only “commodity buildings” but also buildings built by non-real estate developers. For example, companies, universities, and various organizations that can construct both residential and non-residential buildings for their own use. Both datasets include residential and non-residential buildings. From a cyclical perspective (6-12 months), falling home prices and relatively tight financing for property developers will likely prevent a recovery in construction activity. Chart II-5 illustrates that “building construction” floor area started, under construction and completed are all shrinking. They are much weaker than floor area started, under construction and completed of “commodity buildings.” Chart II-5Building Construction Is In Recession Chart II-6Falling Construction-Related Commodities Prices Reflect The Weakness In China Construction Activity The take-away from these datasets is as follows: Construction activity in China goes beyond property developers and “commodity buildings” statistics do not always paint the complete picture. Companies and organizations have dramatically curtailed their construction activity. Combined with tight financing conditions for real estate developers, this heralds a downbeat outlook for construction activity. Bottom Line: While short-term fluctuations in construction activity are impossible to gauge in China, the cyclical outlook remains negative. The current round of stimulus has avoided the property market, and real estate bubble excesses have not yet been wrung out. This is why we remain negative on China’s construction outlook and continue to recommend underweighting property developers relative to both the A-share and investable equity indexes. Falling steel, iron ore and industrial commodities prices confirm that construction activity in China remains weak (Chart II-6). Ellen JingYuan He Associate Vice President ellenj@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The Economic Daily, administratively managed by the Ministry of Communication, is one of the most influential and authoritative newspapers in China. It is an official outlet for the government to publicize its economic policies. Equities Recommendations Currencies, Credit And Fixed-Income Recommendations
The Chinese economic growth model remains reliant on credit formation and capital investment. Therefore, the sustainability of an economic recovery depends on whether Chinese policymakers are willing to keep the stimulus wheel turning. We expect that some…
Historically, China’s credit formation has consistently led economic activity by about three quarters. Even though credit growth this year has not been as strong as in previous expansionary cycles, a turning point in the credit impulse occurred at the start…
Feature We spent the past two weeks visiting and exchanging views with our clients in Asia. We presented our view that the ongoing stimulus measures are beginning to bear fruit in terms of stabilizing China’s economic activity, and that we expect the economic slowdown to bottom early next year. In addition, Chinese policymakers are signaling their willingness to accelerate stimulus on both monetary and fiscal fronts, which should mitigate the downside risks and help the economy regain traction in 2020. Interestingly, our view sparked divergent responses: clients outside of China were more upbeat about the state of the Chinese economy than clients from mainland China. While few investors we spoke to showed concerns over an imminent “hard landing” in China’s economy or systemic risk from China’s financial system, our mainland Chinese clients remain skeptical that the ongoing stimulus will be sufficient to revive the economy. They were also worried that financial regulations may be too restrictive to generate the amount of money growth needed for the economy. Another interesting observation was that while being pessimistic about the economy, our mainland Chinese investors share our assessment that Chinese domestic stocks still have some upside in the coming year. On the other hand, global investors, who are more sanguine about China’s economic recovery, prefer to wait on the sidelines before favoring Chinese investable stocks (Chart 1). Chart 1AA Tale Of Two Markets: Onshore Outperforms Global Markets... Chart 1B...While Offshore Underperforms Below we present some of the top questions that were posed by investors during our trip, along with our answers. We recap the conclusions of our view, and draw out the investment implications of the differences between the sentiments towards China’s equity markets, in the last question of the report. Q: Recent economic data suggests a weakening Chinese economy. Why do you think the economy will reach a bottom in 2020? Historically, China’s credit formation has consistently led economic activity by about three quarters (Chart 2). Even though credit growth this year has not been as strong as in previous expansionary cycles, a turning point in the credit impulse occurred at the start of 2019. This suggests that economic activity should turn around within the next two quarters. Chart 2Expecting A Turn In Q1 2020 Chart 3Emerging Green Shoots Furthermore, despite weakening headline economic data, some underlying components indicate promising improvements (Chart 3): Growth in infrastructure investment has ticked up modestly in the past couple months, and is set to improve further. The State Council mandated local governments to allocate the proceeds from special-purpose bond sales to infrastructure projects by the end of October. This, combined with a frontloading of next year’s local government bonds, should lend support to infrastructure spending in the coming months. After fluctuating in and out of contraction for a year, growth in auto manufacturing production picked up in August and remained positive through October. This improvement is due to less contraction in auto sales and a faster reduction in auto inventories. Moreover, electricity output surged in October, which also indicates that growth may be gaining momentum. Chart 4Trade Should Improve Into 2020 Lastly, global financial conditions have eased significantly and credit growth has picked up worldwide, which should help support global demand. Even though Sino-US trade negotiations are ongoing, our baseline view is that a “Phase One” trade deal will be inked in the next couple months. Eased trade tensions and even some rollbacks in the existing tariffs on Chinese export goods, coupled with improved global demand, should provide some tailwinds to China’s external sector (Chart 4). Q: What is your outlook on China’s economic policy for 2020? The Chinese economic growth model remains reliant on credit formation and capital investment. Therefore, the sustainability of an economic recovery depends on whether Chinese policymakers are willing to keep the stimulus wheel turning. Chart 5A Sign Of A Policy Shift For investors favoring China-related assets, the good news is that there has been an increasing urgency in policymakers’ tone to support economic growth since September. Capex growth from state-owned enterprises (SOEs) has increasingly outpaced the private sector, which is significant: A sustained rotation in the pace of SOE vis-à-vis private sector capex marked a turning point in the 2015-2016 cycle, when Chinese policymakers’ imperative to supporting growth outweighed their desire to continue with structural reforms (Chart 5). We do not expect a 2016-style drastic rise in SOE capex growth next year, because the current economic slowdown is not as severe or prolonged as in 2015. Nonetheless, the rotation in capex growth is an important signal that Chinese policymakers may be more willing to stimulate the economy by again allowing the state sector to upstage the private sector. In the meantime, we expect that some pro-growth “policy adjustments” will be deployed in 2020: Chart 6Infrastructure Investment Likely To Rise Monetary policy will incrementally ease, with one to two 10-15bps loan prime rate (LPR) cuts in the next 3-6 months. At the same time, China’s central bank (PBoC) will keep bank liquidity ample and commercial banks’ funding costs relatively low, by continuing frequent liquidity injections to stabilize the interbank rate. A further cut in the reserve requirement ratio (RRR) is also highly likely. Keeping banks well capitalized will partially mitigate the pressure commercial banks face from falling profit margins and rising credit defaults. Accommodative monetary conditions will also support more stimulus on the fiscal front. We expect that the National People’s Congress in March 2020 will approve higher quotas on the issuing of local government bonds. Chinese state-owned commercial banks will continue to be the main buyers for local government bonds. A portion of 2020 local government special-purpose bond issuance will be frontloaded to the remainder of 2019 and into the first months of next year. Relaxed capital requirements will likely boost local governments’ infrastructure project funding and expenditures. Our model suggests infrastructure spending should pick up from the current 3.3% year-on-year, to close to 7.5% in the second and third quarters next year (Chart 6). There are subtle signs that the government is starting to relax restrictions on the real estate sector. Land sales by local governments have increased since mid-2019, and the trend will continue into 2020 (Chart 7). Income from land sales accounts for 70% of local government revenues, thus allowing more land sales should help fund a larger local government spending budget next year. Declining government subsidies to shantytown renovation (namely the Pledged Supplementary Lending, or PSL) have recently abated and will likely continue to improve (Chart 8). Chart 7Some Improvement To Come In The Real Estate Sector Chart 8Government Subsidies Will Continue December’s Central Economic Work Conference (CEWC) will set policy priorities for the following year. We think Chinese policymakers will make economic growth a top priority for 2020. Credit growth swelled in the first quarter of 2019 following the December 2018 CEWC, and we expect a surge in early 2020 as well.Due to the unusually high credit growth in January this year and the seasonal factor next year (Chinese New Year will fall in January 2020), the surge in credit growth, on a year-over-year basis, will more likely be muted until towards the end of the first quarter and into the second quarter. Investors should overweight Chinese investable stocks in the next 6-12 months, but need to watch for more positive signs to upgrade tactical stance. Beyond the second quarter, however, the outlook gets cloudier as tension from the US election heats up and President Trump may change his trade negotiation strategies with China.1 This may have implications on China’s domestic policies. But for now, our baseline view is that Chinese policymakers will incrementally accelerate the pace of economic stimulus throughout next year. Q: Monetary policy has been accommodative for more than a year, but capex this year has fallen below market expectations compared with past cycles. How will further stimulus help to revive investment and economic growth next year? In short, our answer is this: interest rate cuts alone will not be enough to boost economic growth in China. Capex, and growth more generally, will only revive through synchronized policy support from the Chinese authorities. In a previous report2 we discussed that the lack of response to monetary easing has been due to a less effective monetary policy transmission mechanism, a reactive and reluctant central bank, and a debt-loaded corporate sector. More importantly, the “half-measured” stimulus has been preferred by Chinese authorities in this cycle, as they prioritized financial de-risking over growth and have significantly tightened financial regulations since 2016. Given the expected policy pivot to a more pro-growth stance in the coming year, the following underlines our conviction that capex should pick up in 2020. Modern Money Theory (MMT), with Chinese characteristics:3 local governments will ramp up debt again, and this quasi-fiscal stimulus will be a key support to the economy in 2020. During the 2015-2016 cycle, aggressive interest cuts did not result in a significant uptick in credit growth. Bank lending was not the core driver for economic recovery in 2016. The economy only bottomed following an unprecedented issuance of local government bonds after mid-2015 (Chart 9). Chinese authorities will keep a “back door” open: even though overall tight financial regulations will remain intact, we expect the PBoC to allow a more moderate contraction in shadow banking (Chart 10). This will provide smaller banks and enterprises access to tap into bank credit. Importantly, this means the government will acquiesce to local governments in providing extra funding through shadow banking. We already see local government financing vehicles (LGFV) making a comeback in recent months. Chart 9A Chinese Version Of MMT Chart 10The "Back Door" May Open Wider Small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) will benefit from lowered financing costs through the new LPR system. As we pointed out in our previous report,4 the new LPR regime is not intended as much to expand bank credit as to help struggling SMEs survive economic hardships. This, along with tax cuts, should provide SMEs some relief from capital constraints. Q. CPI has been rising sharply and is above the government’s inflation target of 3%. Will inflation prevent the PBoC from maintaining an easy monetary policy? Chart 11PBoC Likely To Capitulate To Producer Deflation No. We think deflationary pressure in the industrial sector (measured by producer prices) poses a bigger threat to the economy, and that PBoC is more likely to loosen monetary policy than to tighten (Chart 11). Chart 12 shows that the recent surge in headline consumer prices has almost been entirely driven by soaring pork prices. There is compelling evidence from historical data that, unless core consumer price inflation also rises, climbing food prices alone will have a limited impact on PBoC policy (Chart 13). We think this approach is justified, as the necessity of “core feedthrough” is also what most central banks in the developed world look for when confronted with a detrimental supply shock. Chart 12Rising Pork Prices Have Driven Up Headline Inflation... Chart 13...But Won't Be Driving Up Interest Rates Chart 14A Wild Year For The RMB Core CPI has been trending downwards since February 2018, and there is no evidence to suggest that food prices will drive up core CPI inflation (Chart 13, bottom panel). This, in combination with deflating producer prices, means that the probability of tighter monetary policy over the coming 6-9 months is extremely low. In fact, we expect, with high conviction, that the PBOC will guide the LPR lower in the coming months. Q: What is your view on the RMB for 2020? The RMB depreciated by 5% against the US dollar from its peak in February this year, mostly driven by market expectations of US tariffs imposed on Chinese export goods. Interest rate differentials, short-term capital flows, and economic fundamentals all have played much smaller roles in the RMB’s value changes (Chart 14). The depreciation in the CNY/USD this year has pushed the RMB close to two sigma below its long-term trend (Chart 15). As we expect a “Phase One” trade deal to be signed and trade tensions abating at least in the near term, the RMB will face upward pressure through the first half of 2020. The appreciation will also be supported by, although to a lesser extent, China’s improved domestic economy, rising demand for RMB-denominated assets, and a weakening US dollar (Chart 16). According to our model, the USD/CNY exchange rate can return to a 6.8-7.0 range, if a significant portion of the existing tariffs is rolled back (Chart 17). This range seems to be within the “fair value” of the RMB, justifiable by the current China-US interest rate differential (Chart 14, bottom panel). Chart 15Has The RMB Gone Too Far? Chart 16Demand For RMB Assets On The Rise, Despite The Trade War However, it would not be in the PBoC’s best interests to let the RMB appreciate too rapidly, because an appreciating Chinese currency would act as a deflationary force on China’s export and manufacturing sectors. The large differential in the China-US interest rates would allow PBoC to cut interest and/or RRR rates, to ease upward pressure on the RMB. Chart 17Tariff Rollbacks Will Push Up RMB Q: How should equity investors position themselves towards China over the coming year? We are bullish on Chinese investable stocks in the next 6 to 12 months, based on our view that the Chinese economy will bottom in the first quarter next year, policy will be incrementally more supportive, and a “Phase One” trade deal will be signed soon. In the very near term, however, we think downside risks to Chinese equities are not trivial. We remain a neutral tactical stance, but will continue to watch for the following signs before upgrading our tactical call from neutral to overweight.5 Chart 18A (top panel) shows that cyclical stocks remain very depressed relative to defensives, underscoring investors’ lack of confidence in the Chinese economy and trade negotiations. A breakout in cyclicals versus defensives would signify a major improvement in investor sentiment towards Chinese economic growth. An uptick in the relative performance of industrials and consumer staples (Chart 18A, bottom panel). The negative sensitivity of industrials and positive sensitivity of consumer staples to monetary policy suggests that the relative performance between the two sectors may be a reflationary barometer for China’s economy. The relative performance trend remains off its recent low, which suggests that China’s existing policy stance has not yet turned more reflationary. A technical breakdown in the relative performance of healthcare and utility stocks (Chart 18B) would also be a bullish sign. Investable health care and utilities stocks have historically led China’s economic activity, core inflation and stock prices by 1-3 months. A technical breakdown in the relative performance of these sectors would signify that market participants anticipate a bottom in China’s economy. As we mentioned at the outset, we observed an interesting divergence in sentiment among our domestic versus global investors. This divergence is reflected in both the onshore and offshore stock markets; year to date, onshore A shares have outperformed global benchmarks by 5.6% (Chart 1, on page 1 of the report). Chart 18AWaiting For A Telltale Sign... Chart 18B...Before A Tactical Upgrade However, all of the outperformance in A shares occurred before end April, when the trade talks broke down and domestic credit expansion significantly slowed from the first quarter. Since May, the relative performance of A shares in US dollar terms has been mostly flat, reflecting the fact the markets were not expecting a significant stimulus forthcoming. Chinese investable stocks, on the other hand, have been trading heavily on the day-to-day news surrounding the trade negotiations and have significantly underperformed both domestic A shares and global benchmarks. Therefore, our base case view of a trade truce coupled with an improved Chinese economy and more supportive policy near year, warrant a cyclical overweight stance favoring Chinese investable stocks over their domestic peers. Earnings from both onshore and offshore markets will benefit from a modest improvement in economic activity, but we think the investable market will benefit more from the trade truce and more upside growth potential. Stay tuned. Jing Sima China Strategist jings@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Is China Afraid Of The Big Bad Warren?" dated October 25, 2019, available at gps.bcaresearch.com 2Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, " Threading A Stimulus Needle (Part 1): A Reluctant PBoC," dated July 10 2019, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 3We call it a “MMT” because China’s state-owned commercial banks own approximately 80% of local government bonds. The commercial banks are essentially backed by China’s central bank, which has a fiat currency system and can make independent monetary policy decisions. 4Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Mild Deflation Means Timid Easing," dated October 9, 2019, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 5Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, "A Guide To Chinese Investable Equity Sector Performance," dated October 30, 2019, available at cis.bcaresearch.com Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
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Highlights Since early this year, global semiconductor stock prices have been front-running a demand recovery that has not yet begun. There is strong industry optimism surrounding a potential demand boost for semiconductors from the rollout of 5G networks and phones in 2020. Yet we expect actual 2020 Chinese 5G smartphone shipments to fall considerably short of what industry observers expect, especially in the first half of the year. Global semiconductor stocks are over-hyped. Even though momentum could push them higher in the short term, we believe there will be a better entry point in the coming months. Given that Korean semiconductor stocks have lagged, we are upgrading Korean tech stocks and the KOSPI to overweight within the EM equity benchmark. Feature Global semiconductor stock prices have been rallying strongly, increasingly diverging from global semiconductor sales since early January. The former have risen to new highs, while the latter have remained in deep contraction (Chart 1). Chart 1A Puzzle: Semiconductors Stock Prices Skyrocketed When Sales Remain In A Deep Contraction We are puzzled by such a dramatic divergence between share prices and the industry’s top line. After all, the ongoing contraction in worldwide semiconductor sales has been broad-based across both regions and the majority of top 10 semiconductor companies (Charts 2 and 3). Chart 2A Broad-Based Contraction Across All Regions… Chart 3…And Most Top Semiconductor Companies In our June1 report, we argued that world semiconductor sales would continue to shrink through the remainder of 2019. This view has played out, but global semiconductor share prices have surged and outperformed the global equity benchmark. Global semiconductor stock prices have been front-running a demand recovery that has not yet begun. It seems the market has been looking beyond the current weakness. It currently expects a potential demand boost for semiconductors from 5G phones in 2020 on the back of rising hopes of a US-China trade conflict resolution. Is such hype about 5G network and corresponding shipments justified? Our research leads us to contend that global semiconductor sales will likely post only low- to middle-single-digit growth in 2020, with most of the recovery back loaded in the second half of the year. Hype over 5G phones among industry participants and investors may continue pushing semiconductor share prices higher in the near term. However, the odds are that the reality of tepid semiconductor sales growth will likely set in early next year, and semiconductor stocks will correct considerably. In short, we do not recommend chasing the rally. There will be a better entry point in the months ahead. 5G-Smartphones: The Savior Of Semiconductor Demand? Chart 4Semiconductor Sales Are Still Contracting At A Double-Digit Rate The primary driver behind the rally in semiconductor share prices is strong optimism among major semiconductor producers and investors about a rapid ramp-up of global 5G-smartphone adoption. In addition, the market is also holding onto a good amount of hope for a US-China trade conflict resolution, which will also facilitate the pace of global 5G deployment. Mobile phones account for the largest share (29%) of global semiconductor revenue. The industry expects strong global 5G-smartphone shipments in 2020 to spur a meaningful recovery in semiconductor demand (Chart 4). Table 1 shows a list of estimates for 2020 global 5G-smartphone shipments by major semiconductor companies, industry analysts and investors, ranging from 120 million to 225 million units, with a mean of 180 million units. Table 1Market Forecasts Of In 2020 Global 5G-Smartphone Shipments In particular, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), the world’s largest dedicated integrated circuit (IC) foundry, recently almost doubled its forecast for 5G smartphone penetration for 2020 to a mid-teen percentage from a single-digit percentage forecast made just six months ago. Given that global smartphone shipments currently stand at roughly 1.4 billion units per year, a 15% penetration rate would translate into 210 million units of 5G smartphone shipments in 2020. Meanwhile, Qualcomm, the world's largest maker of mobile application processors and baseband modems, last week predicted that 2020 global 5G smartphone shipments will range between 175 million units and 225 million units. We agree that 5G smartphone sales in 2020 will increase sharply from currently very low levels, but we also believe the penetration pace estimated by the industry is optimistic. The basis for our conclusion is as follows: Chart 5So Far, China 5G-Adoption Pace Has Been Much Slower Than Its 4G 5G-smartphone shipments in China will largely determine the pace of worldwide 5G-phone shipments. The country will be the world leader in the 5G smartphone market due to the government’s promotion of it and the advanced 5G technology held by China's largest telecom equipment producer, Huawei. China announced the debut of the 5G-era on June 6. Since then, total 5G-smartphone shipments have been only about 800,000 units through the end of September. In terms of the pace of penetration (5G-smartphone shipments as a share of total mobile phone shipments during the first three months of launch), the rate was a mere 0.3%. In comparison with the debut of the 4G-era in December 2013, shipments of 4G phones in China were significantly larger, and their adoption rate was much faster (Chart 5). During the first three months of the 4G launch, 4G phone shipments were 9.7 million units, reaching 10% of total smartphone shipments. Here are the most important reasons behind what will be a much slower penetration pace for 5G smartphones in China compared with the 4G rollout. We agree that 5G smartphone sales in 2020 will increase sharply from currently very low levels, but we also believe the penetration pace estimated by the industry is optimistic. Market saturation: The Chinese smartphone market has become much more saturated than it was six years ago when 4G was launched. Since then, there have been about 2.3 billion units of 4G smartphones sold, with 1.3 billion units sold in the past three years – nearly equaling the total Chinese population. This means the replacement need in China is low. High prices: 5G smartphones in China are currently much more expensive than 4G ones. 5G phone prices range from RMB 4000-7000 in China, while most of the 4G ones sell within the range of RMB 1000-3000. According to data from QuestMobile, a professional big data intelligence service provider in China's mobile internet market, in the first half of 2019, about 41% of smartphones were sold at RMB 1000-2000, about 30% at RMB 2000-3000, and only 10% at RMB 4000 and above. Functionality: At the moment, except for faster data download/upload speed, 5G smartphones do not offer much more functionality than 4G ones. Back in 2014, 4G phones had much more attractive features than 3G. For example, while 3G smartphones only allowed audio and picture transmission, those with 4G enabled video chatting and high-quality streaming video. In addition, for now, there are very few smartphone apps that can only be used for 5G phones. 5G Infrastructure: Presently, there is only very limited geographical coverage of 5G base stations. The number of 5G base stations is estimated to be 130 thousand units this year, only accounting for 1.6% of total base stations in China. In comparison, 65% of all Chinese base stations are 4G-enabled. Meanwhile, to cover the same region, the number of 5G base stations needs to at least double that of 4G ones. It will take at a minimum two or three years to develop decent coverage of 5G base stations. Besides, the cost of building 5G-enabled infrastructure is much more expensive than the deployment of the 4G ones. There are two types of 5G networks: Non-standalone (NSA) and Standalone (SA). The 5G data transmission speed is significantly faster in SA mode than in NSA mode. However, the deployment cost of the SA network is much higher than the cost for NSA networks, as the latter can be built from existing 4G networks, but the former cannot. Critically, the Chinese government recently announced only SA-compatible 5G smartphones will be allowed to have access to the 5G network in China, starting January 1, 2020. This signals that the focus of future 5G network development will be centered around SA mode instead of this year’s NSA mode. Over 90% of China’s 5G network was NSA mode in 2019. Building a 5G SA network will take longer and cost more. The market expects China to build as much as 1 million units of 5G base stations in 2020. Even if this goal is achieved, it only accounts for about 11% of total Chinese base stations. Chart 6Chinese Smartphone Sales: Still In Contraction Lack of variety of SA-compatible 5G-phone models. There are also limited options for SA-compatible 5G smartphones models. So far, even though Huawei, Xiaomi, Vivo, Oppo, ZTE and Samsung have all released 5G smartphones, only models from Huawei work under SA networks.2 All others only work under the NSA network. Hence, the variety of SA-compatible 5G phone models is very limited. This will likely delay sales of 5G phones in China. Many more models of SA-compatible 5G smartphones will likely be released only in the second half of next year, which may both drive down 5G smartphone prices and attract more buyers. Consumer spending slowdown: 4G smartphones can meet the needs of the majority of users, and most users have purchased a new phone within the past three years. With elevated economic uncertainty and slowing income growth, a larger proportion of people in China may decide to delay upgrading from 4G-phones to much more expensive 5G ones. This echoes a continuing decline in Chinese smartphone sales (Chart 6). Overall, from Chinese consumers’ perspective, a 5G phone in 2020 will be a nice-to-have, but not a must-have. Given all the aforementioned factors, our best guess for 2020 Chinese 5G smartphone shipments is 40-60 million units, with a larger proportion occurring in the second half of the year. From Chinese consumers’ perspective, a 5G phone in 2020 will be a nice-to-have, but not a must-have. As China is much more aggressive in moving to 5G network adaptation than other large economies, we share industry experts’ forecasts that China will account for 50% of total global 5G shipments. Provided our estimate for China is about 50 million units, our global forecast for 5G phone shipments in 2020 comes to about 100 million units worldwide. This is substantially lower than industry and analyst average estimates of 180 million units (see Table 1 on page 4). Notably, rising 5G smartphone sales will cannibalize some 4G-phone demand. Consequently, aggregate demand for semiconductors will not grow, but the share of high-valued-added chips in the overall product mix will rise. Bottom Line: The penetration pace of 5G smartphones will be meaningfully slower than both the semiconductor producers and analysts expect. Most likely, a meaningful recovery in global aggregate smartphone sales will not occur over the next six months. We suspect the positive impact of 5G phone sales will be felt by global semiconductor producers largely in the second half of 2020. Semiconductor Demand Beyond 5G In terms of end usage, except smartphones, the top five end uses for semiconductors are personal computers (PCs) (12%), servers (11%), diverse consumer products (12%), automotive (10%), and industrial electronics (9%). Structural PC demand is down, but sales have been more or less flat in the past three years (Chart 7). Next year, commercial demand may accelerate as enterprises work through the remainder of their Windows 10 migration. However, household demand is still facing strong competition from tablets. Overall, we expect PC demand to remain stagnant. Global server shipments sank deeper into contraction in the second quarter of this year due to a slowdown in purchasing from cloud providers and hyperscale customers. They may stay in moderate contraction over the next six months as global economic uncertainty remain elevated, which may discourage enterprises’ investment plans (Chart 8). Chart 7Structural PC Demand Is Stagnant And Will Remain So In 2020 Chart 8Global Server Shipments: A Moderate Contraction In 2020 Chart 9Automotive-Related Semiconductor Demand: A Moderate Growth Ahead Chinese auto sales – about 30% of the world total – will likely stage a rate-of-change improvement, moving from deep to mild contraction or stagnation over the next six months.3 Increasing penetration of new energy vehicles and continuing 5G deployment may still result in moderate growth in auto-related semiconductor demand (Chart 9). Semiconductor demand from diverse consumer products slightly declined in the third quarter, with robust growth in tablets, eReaders and portable navigation devices, and contraction in all other subsectors including TV sets, gaming, printers and images, cameras and set-top boxes (Chart 10). This may remain in slight contraction or stagnation over the next three to six months. Automation and 5G deployment will likely continue to increase semiconductor sales in the industrial sector (Chart 11). Chart 10Semiconductor Demand From Consumer Products: A Slight Contraction Or Stagnation Ahead Chart 11Industrial Semiconductor Demand: More Upside Ahead Chart 12Memory Prices Still Signal Sluggish Semiconductor Demand Overall, demand recovery has not yet begun. The lack of price recovery in DRAM prices after 18 months of declines and still-low NAND prices are also signaling sluggish semiconductor demand (Chart 12). Bottom Line: Odds are that global semiconductor demand in sectors other than smartphones will show improvement in terms of rate of change, but will still likely be flat in 2020. TSMC Sales: A Harbinger Of Industry Recovery? TSMC, the world’s biggest semiconductor company, posted a revival in sales over four consecutive months from June to September. Do TSMC sales lead global semiconductor sales? The answer is not always. TSMC sales do not always correlate well with global semiconductor sales (Chart 13). For example, TSMC sales diverged from global semiconductor sales in 2017-‘18 and 2013-‘14. So what are the reasons for strong increase in TSMC sales? First, it reflects market share rotation in the global smartphone market in favor of smartphone producers that use TSMC-fabricated chips. Chart 13TSMC Sales Do Not Always Lead Global Semiconductor Sales Demand from the global smartphone sector contributes to almost half of TSMC’s total revenue. Apple and Huawei are TSMC’s two top customers. The most recent report from market research firm Canalys shows that while Apple’s smartphone shipments declined 7% year-on-year last quarter, Huawei’s shipments soared 29%.4 Combined, smartphone shipments from these two companies still jumped nearly 12% year-on-year in the third quarter of the year. This has increased their market share in the global smartphone market to 31% now from 28% a year ago. Second, rising TSMC sales also reflect market share rotation in the global server market, in particular rising shipments and growing market share of servers using AMD high-performing-computing (HPC) chips instead of Intel ones. AMD’s 7nm Epyc CPU, launched this August and manufactured by TSMC, has been taking share from Intel in the global server market. This has driven the increase in TSMC’s revenue from the HPC sector. Third, the share of value-added products (high-end chips) in TSMC’s product mix has been rising rapidly. TSMC’s share of revenue from 7nm technology jumped from 21% to 27% in the third quarter, as most of Apple’s and Huawei’s chips and all of AMD’s Epyc CPUs are 7nm-based. Back in the third quarter of 2018, TSMC’s 7nm business only accounted for 11% of its total revenue. Chart 14Both TSMC Sales And Taiwanese PMI Could Continue To Improve While Global Semiconductor Sales Remain In Contraction Finally, although internet of things (IoT) and automotive chips only account for 9% and 4% of TSMC’s total share of revenue respectively, strong growth in both segments –33% year-on-year in IoT and 20% year-on-year in automotive – indeed shows exceptional demand in these two sectors in a weakening global economic environment. As IoT and automotive development will highly rely on global 5G infrastructure development, their impact will be meaningful once the global 5G network becomes well advanced and widely installed. To conclude, while a 40% boost in TSMC’s capital spending indeed paints a positive picture on global semiconductor demand over the longer term, rising TSMC sales do not mean an imminent and strong recovery in the global semiconductor sector is in the works. Huawei is the global 5G technology leader and the major supplier in both 5G-network equipment and 5G smartphones; the company will be a major revenue contributor to TSMC. As Huawei will likely place more orders to TSMC for chip fabrication, this will likely result in further improvement in TSMC’s sales (Chart 14). Bottom Line: Rising TSMC sales do not necessarily herald an imminent and robust cyclical recovery in the global semiconductor sector. Investment Conclusions Global semiconductor stock prices have been front running a recovery that has not yet begun. In addition, there is still uncertainty about the technology aspect of US-China trade negotiations. The US will likely continue to have Huawei and other Chinese high-tech companies on its trade-ban list – its so-called Entity List. TSMC sales do not always correlate well with global semiconductor sales. Notably, global semiconductor sales and profits are still in deep contraction, while share prices are at all-time highs (Chart 15). As a result, semiconductor stocks’ multiples have spiked to their previous highs (Chart 16). Chart 15Semiconductor Companies Profits: Still In Deep Contraction Chart 16Elevated Semiconductor Stocks Multiples While it is common for share prices to rally ahead of a business cycle/profit revival, we believe a true recovery will only emerge in spring 2020, and it will initially be much more subdued than industry watchers and investors expect. In the near term, strong momentum could still push semiconductor stock prices higher. However, the reality will then set in and there will be an air pocket before a more sustainable bull market emerges. Our US Equity Investment Strategy earlier this week downgraded S&P semiconductor equipment companies to underweight and put the S&P Semiconductors Index on a downgrade alert.5 Their newly created top-down semiconductor profit growth model warns that an earnings recovery is not yet imminent (Chart 17). For EM-dedicated equity managers, we have been neutral on Asian semiconductor sectors. We continue to recommend a market-weight allocation to Taiwan’s overall market, while we are upgrading the Korean technology sector from a neutral allocation to overweight. Korean semiconductor stocks have rallied much less than their global peers. Hence, the risk of a major relapse is lower. Given that we have been overweight non-tech Korean stocks, upgrading tech stocks to overweight means we will be overweight the KOSPI within the EM equity benchmark (Chart 18). Chart 17Semiconductor Earnings Recovery: Not Imminent Chart 18Upgrade Korean Tech Stocks And Overweight KOSPI Within EM Meanwhile, we remain long the Bloomberg Asia-Pacific Semiconductor Index and short the S&P 500 Semiconductor Index. This trade has produced a 7% gain since its initiation on June 13, 2019. The Bloomberg Asia-Pacific Semiconductor index has 12 stocks. Samsung and TSMC account for 38% and 37% of the index, respectively. The S&P 500 Semiconductor Index has 13 stocks. Intel, Broadcom, Texas Instruments and Qualcomm are the top five constituents, together accounting for nearly 77% of the index. Although the US and China may reach a temporary trade deal, the US will continue to restrict sales of tech products and high-end semiconductors to China. As a result, these US semiconductor companies, most of which are IC designing companies, will likely experience a more subdued than expected recovery in sales. Ellen JingYuan He Associate Vice President ellenj@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report "The Global Semiconductor Sector: Is A Cyclical Upturn Imminent?" dated June 13, 2019, available at ems.bcaresearch.com 2 https://www.guancha.cn/ChanJing/2019_09_21_518748.shtml http://www.cac.gov.cn/2019-10/23/c_1573361796389322.htm 3 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report "Chinese Auto Demand: Time For A Recovery?" dated October 17, 2019, available at ems.bcaresearch.com 4 https://www.canalys.com/analysis/smartphone+analysis 5 Please see US Equity Strategy Special Report "Defying Gravity," dated November 4, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com
Highlights Since early this year, global semiconductor stock prices have been front-running a demand recovery that has not yet begun. There is strong industry optimism surrounding a potential demand boost for semiconductors from the rollout of 5G networks and phones in 2020. Yet we expect actual 2020 Chinese 5G smartphone shipments to fall considerably short of what industry observers expect, especially in the first half of the year. Global semiconductor stocks are over-hyped. Even though momentum could push them higher in the short term, we believe there will be a better entry point in the coming months. Given that Korean semiconductor stocks have lagged, we are upgrading Korean tech stocks and the KOSPI to overweight within the EM equity benchmark. Feature Global semiconductor stock prices have been rallying strongly, increasingly diverging from global semiconductor sales since early January. The former have risen to new highs, while the latter have remained in deep contraction (Chart 1). Chart 1A Puzzle: Semiconductors Stock Prices Skyrocketed When Sales Remain In A Deep Contraction We are puzzled by such a dramatic divergence between share prices and the industry’s top line. After all, the ongoing contraction in worldwide semiconductor sales has been broad-based across both regions and the majority of top 10 semiconductor companies (Charts 2 and 3). Chart 2A Broad-Based Contraction Across All Regions… Chart 3…And Most Top Semiconductor Companies In our June1 report, we argued that world semiconductor sales would continue to shrink through the remainder of 2019. This view has played out, but global semiconductor share prices have surged and outperformed the global equity benchmark. Global semiconductor stock prices have been front-running a demand recovery that has not yet begun. It seems the market has been looking beyond the current weakness. It currently expects a potential demand boost for semiconductors from 5G phones in 2020 on the back of rising hopes of a US-China trade conflict resolution. Is such hype about 5G network and corresponding shipments justified? Our research leads us to contend that global semiconductor sales will likely post only low- to middle-single-digit growth in 2020, with most of the recovery back loaded in the second half of the year. Hype over 5G phones among industry participants and investors may continue pushing semiconductor share prices higher in the near term. However, the odds are that the reality of tepid semiconductor sales growth will likely set in early next year, and semiconductor stocks will correct considerably. In short, we do not recommend chasing the rally. There will be a better entry point in the months ahead. 5G-Smartphones: The Savior Of Semiconductor Demand? Chart 4Semiconductor Sales Are Still Contracting At A Double-Digit Rate The primary driver behind the rally in semiconductor share prices is strong optimism among major semiconductor producers and investors about a rapid ramp-up of global 5G-smartphone adoption. In addition, the market is also holding onto a good amount of hope for a US-China trade conflict resolution, which will also facilitate the pace of global 5G deployment. Mobile phones account for the largest share (29%) of global semiconductor revenue. The industry expects strong global 5G-smartphone shipments in 2020 to spur a meaningful recovery in semiconductor demand (Chart 4). Table 1 shows a list of estimates for 2020 global 5G-smartphone shipments by major semiconductor companies, industry analysts and investors, ranging from 120 million to 225 million units, with a mean of 180 million units. Table 1Market Forecasts Of In 2020 Global 5G-Smartphone Shipments In particular, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), the world’s largest dedicated integrated circuit (IC) foundry, recently almost doubled its forecast for 5G smartphone penetration for 2020 to a mid-teen percentage from a single-digit percentage forecast made just six months ago. Given that global smartphone shipments currently stand at roughly 1.4 billion units per year, a 15% penetration rate would translate into 210 million units of 5G smartphone shipments in 2020. Meanwhile, Qualcomm, the world's largest maker of mobile application processors and baseband modems, last week predicted that 2020 global 5G smartphone shipments will range between 175 million units and 225 million units. We agree that 5G smartphone sales in 2020 will increase sharply from currently very low levels, but we also believe the penetration pace estimated by the industry is optimistic. The basis for our conclusion is as follows: Chart 5So Far, China 5G-Adoption Pace Has Been Much Slower Than Its 4G 5G-smartphone shipments in China will largely determine the pace of worldwide 5G-phone shipments. The country will be the world leader in the 5G smartphone market due to the government’s promotion of it and the advanced 5G technology held by China's largest telecom equipment producer, Huawei. China announced the debut of the 5G-era on June 6. Since then, total 5G-smartphone shipments have been only about 800,000 units through the end of September. In terms of the pace of penetration (5G-smartphone shipments as a share of total mobile phone shipments during the first three months of launch), the rate was a mere 0.3%. In comparison with the debut of the 4G-era in December 2013, shipments of 4G phones in China were significantly larger, and their adoption rate was much faster (Chart 5). During the first three months of the 4G launch, 4G phone shipments were 9.7 million units, reaching 10% of total smartphone shipments. Here are the most important reasons behind what will be a much slower penetration pace for 5G smartphones in China compared with the 4G rollout. We agree that 5G smartphone sales in 2020 will increase sharply from currently very low levels, but we also believe the penetration pace estimated by the industry is optimistic. Market saturation: The Chinese smartphone market has become much more saturated than it was six years ago when 4G was launched. Since then, there have been about 2.3 billion units of 4G smartphones sold, with 1.3 billion units sold in the past three years – nearly equaling the total Chinese population. This means the replacement need in China is low. High prices: 5G smartphones in China are currently much more expensive than 4G ones. 5G phone prices range from RMB 4000-7000 in China, while most of the 4G ones sell within the range of RMB 1000-3000. According to data from QuestMobile, a professional big data intelligence service provider in China's mobile internet market, in the first half of 2019, about 41% of smartphones were sold at RMB 1000-2000, about 30% at RMB 2000-3000, and only 10% at RMB 4000 and above. Functionality: At the moment, except for faster data download/upload speed, 5G smartphones do not offer much more functionality than 4G ones. Back in 2014, 4G phones had much more attractive features than 3G. For example, while 3G smartphones only allowed audio and picture transmission, those with 4G enabled video chatting and high-quality streaming video. In addition, for now, there are very few smartphone apps that can only be used for 5G phones. 5G Infrastructure: Presently, there is only very limited geographical coverage of 5G base stations. The number of 5G base stations is estimated to be 130 thousand units this year, only accounting for 1.6% of total base stations in China. In comparison, 65% of all Chinese base stations are 4G-enabled. Meanwhile, to cover the same region, the number of 5G base stations needs to at least double that of 4G ones. It will take at a minimum two or three years to develop decent coverage of 5G base stations. Besides, the cost of building 5G-enabled infrastructure is much more expensive than the deployment of the 4G ones. There are two types of 5G networks: Non-standalone (NSA) and Standalone (SA). The 5G data transmission speed is significantly faster in SA mode than in NSA mode. However, the deployment cost of the SA network is much higher than the cost for NSA networks, as the latter can be built from existing 4G networks, but the former cannot. Critically, the Chinese government recently announced only SA-compatible 5G smartphones will be allowed to have access to the 5G network in China, starting January 1, 2020. This signals that the focus of future 5G network development will be centered around SA mode instead of this year’s NSA mode. Over 90% of China’s 5G network was NSA mode in 2019. Building a 5G SA network will take longer and cost more. The market expects China to build as much as 1 million units of 5G base stations in 2020. Even if this goal is achieved, it only accounts for about 11% of total Chinese base stations. Chart 6Chinese Smartphone Sales: Still In Contraction Lack of variety of SA-compatible 5G-phone models. There are also limited options for SA-compatible 5G smartphones models. So far, even though Huawei, Xiaomi, Vivo, Oppo, ZTE and Samsung have all released 5G smartphones, only models from Huawei work under SA networks.2 All others only work under the NSA network. Hence, the variety of SA-compatible 5G phone models is very limited. This will likely delay sales of 5G phones in China. Many more models of SA-compatible 5G smartphones will likely be released only in the second half of next year, which may both drive down 5G smartphone prices and attract more buyers. Consumer spending slowdown: 4G smartphones can meet the needs of the majority of users, and most users have purchased a new phone within the past three years. With elevated economic uncertainty and slowing income growth, a larger proportion of people in China may decide to delay upgrading from 4G-phones to much more expensive 5G ones. This echoes a continuing decline in Chinese smartphone sales (Chart 6). Overall, from Chinese consumers’ perspective, a 5G phone in 2020 will be a nice-to-have, but not a must-have. Given all the aforementioned factors, our best guess for 2020 Chinese 5G smartphone shipments is 40-60 million units, with a larger proportion occurring in the second half of the year. From Chinese consumers’ perspective, a 5G phone in 2020 will be a nice-to-have, but not a must-have. As China is much more aggressive in moving to 5G network adaptation than other large economies, we share industry experts’ forecasts that China will account for 50% of total global 5G shipments. Provided our estimate for China is about 50 million units, our global forecast for 5G phone shipments in 2020 comes to about 100 million units worldwide. This is substantially lower than industry and analyst average estimates of 180 million units (see Table 1 on page 4). Notably, rising 5G smartphone sales will cannibalize some 4G-phone demand. Consequently, aggregate demand for semiconductors will not grow, but the share of high-valued-added chips in the overall product mix will rise. Bottom Line: The penetration pace of 5G smartphones will be meaningfully slower than both the semiconductor producers and analysts expect. Most likely, a meaningful recovery in global aggregate smartphone sales will not occur over the next six months. We suspect the positive impact of 5G phone sales will be felt by global semiconductor producers largely in the second half of 2020. Semiconductor Demand Beyond 5G In terms of end usage, except smartphones, the top five end uses for semiconductors are personal computers (PCs) (12%), servers (11%), diverse consumer products (12%), automotive (10%), and industrial electronics (9%). Structural PC demand is down, but sales have been more or less flat in the past three years (Chart 7). Next year, commercial demand may accelerate as enterprises work through the remainder of their Windows 10 migration. However, household demand is still facing strong competition from tablets. Overall, we expect PC demand to remain stagnant. Global server shipments sank deeper into contraction in the second quarter of this year due to a slowdown in purchasing from cloud providers and hyperscale customers. They may stay in moderate contraction over the next six months as global economic uncertainty remain elevated, which may discourage enterprises’ investment plans (Chart 8). Chart 7Structural PC Demand Is Stagnant And Will Remain So In 2020 Chart 8Global Server Shipments: A Moderate Contraction In 2020 Chart 9Automotive-Related Semiconductor Demand: A Moderate Growth Ahead Chinese auto sales – about 30% of the world total – will likely stage a rate-of-change improvement, moving from deep to mild contraction or stagnation over the next six months.3 Increasing penetration of new energy vehicles and continuing 5G deployment may still result in moderate growth in auto-related semiconductor demand (Chart 9). Semiconductor demand from diverse consumer products slightly declined in the third quarter, with robust growth in tablets, eReaders and portable navigation devices, and contraction in all other subsectors including TV sets, gaming, printers and images, cameras and set-top boxes (Chart 10). This may remain in slight contraction or stagnation over the next three to six months. Automation and 5G deployment will likely continue to increase semiconductor sales in the industrial sector (Chart 11). Chart 10Semiconductor Demand From Consumer Products: A Slight Contraction Or Stagnation Ahead Chart 11Industrial Semiconductor Demand: More Upside Ahead Chart 12Memory Prices Still Signal Sluggish Semiconductor Demand Overall, demand recovery has not yet begun. The lack of price recovery in DRAM prices after 18 months of declines and still-low NAND prices are also signaling sluggish semiconductor demand (Chart 12). Bottom Line: Odds are that global semiconductor demand in sectors other than smartphones will show improvement in terms of rate of change, but will still likely be flat in 2020. TSMC Sales: A Harbinger Of Industry Recovery? TSMC, the world’s biggest semiconductor company, posted a revival in sales over four consecutive months from June to September. Do TSMC sales lead global semiconductor sales? The answer is not always. TSMC sales do not always correlate well with global semiconductor sales (Chart 13). For example, TSMC sales diverged from global semiconductor sales in 2017-‘18 and 2013-‘14. So what are the reasons for strong increase in TSMC sales? First, it reflects market share rotation in the global smartphone market in favor of smartphone producers that use TSMC-fabricated chips. Chart 13TSMC Sales Do Not Always Lead Global Semiconductor Sales Demand from the global smartphone sector contributes to almost half of TSMC’s total revenue. Apple and Huawei are TSMC’s two top customers. The most recent report from market research firm Canalys shows that while Apple’s smartphone shipments declined 7% year-on-year last quarter, Huawei’s shipments soared 29%.4 Combined, smartphone shipments from these two companies still jumped nearly 12% year-on-year in the third quarter of the year. This has increased their market share in the global smartphone market to 31% now from 28% a year ago. Second, rising TSMC sales also reflect market share rotation in the global server market, in particular rising shipments and growing market share of servers using AMD high-performing-computing (HPC) chips instead of Intel ones. AMD’s 7nm Epyc CPU, launched this August and manufactured by TSMC, has been taking share from Intel in the global server market. This has driven the increase in TSMC’s revenue from the HPC sector. Third, the share of value-added products (high-end chips) in TSMC’s product mix has been rising rapidly. TSMC’s share of revenue from 7nm technology jumped from 21% to 27% in the third quarter, as most of Apple’s and Huawei’s chips and all of AMD’s Epyc CPUs are 7nm-based. Back in the third quarter of 2018, TSMC’s 7nm business only accounted for 11% of its total revenue. Chart 14Both TSMC Sales And Taiwanese PMI Could Continue To Improve While Global Semiconductor Sales Remain In Contraction Finally, although internet of things (IoT) and automotive chips only account for 9% and 4% of TSMC’s total share of revenue respectively, strong growth in both segments –33% year-on-year in IoT and 20% year-on-year in automotive – indeed shows exceptional demand in these two sectors in a weakening global economic environment. As IoT and automotive development will highly rely on global 5G infrastructure development, their impact will be meaningful once the global 5G network becomes well advanced and widely installed. To conclude, while a 40% boost in TSMC’s capital spending indeed paints a positive picture on global semiconductor demand over the longer term, rising TSMC sales do not mean an imminent and strong recovery in the global semiconductor sector is in the works. Huawei is the global 5G technology leader and the major supplier in both 5G-network equipment and 5G smartphones; the company will be a major revenue contributor to TSMC. As Huawei will likely place more orders to TSMC for chip fabrication, this will likely result in further improvement in TSMC’s sales (Chart 14). Bottom Line: Rising TSMC sales do not necessarily herald an imminent and robust cyclical recovery in the global semiconductor sector. Investment Conclusions Global semiconductor stock prices have been front running a recovery that has not yet begun. In addition, there is still uncertainty about the technology aspect of US-China trade negotiations. The US will likely continue to have Huawei and other Chinese high-tech companies on its trade-ban list – its so-called Entity List. TSMC sales do not always correlate well with global semiconductor sales. Notably, global semiconductor sales and profits are still in deep contraction, while share prices are at all-time highs (Chart 15). As a result, semiconductor stocks’ multiples have spiked to their previous highs (Chart 16). Chart 15Semiconductor Companies Profits: Still In Deep Contraction Chart 16Elevated Semiconductor Stocks Multiples While it is common for share prices to rally ahead of a business cycle/profit revival, we believe a true recovery will only emerge in spring 2020, and it will initially be much more subdued than industry watchers and investors expect. In the near term, strong momentum could still push semiconductor stock prices higher. However, the reality will then set in and there will be an air pocket before a more sustainable bull market emerges. Our US Equity Investment Strategy earlier this week downgraded S&P semiconductor equipment companies to underweight and put the S&P Semiconductors Index on a downgrade alert.5 Their newly created top-down semiconductor profit growth model warns that an earnings recovery is not yet imminent (Chart 17). For EM-dedicated equity managers, we have been neutral on Asian semiconductor sectors. We continue to recommend a market-weight allocation to Taiwan’s overall market, while we are upgrading the Korean technology sector from a neutral allocation to overweight. Korean semiconductor stocks have rallied much less than their global peers. Hence, the risk of a major relapse is lower. Given that we have been overweight non-tech Korean stocks, upgrading tech stocks to overweight means we will be overweight the KOSPI within the EM equity benchmark (Chart 18). Chart 17Semiconductor Earnings Recovery: Not Imminent Chart 18Upgrade Korean Tech Stocks And Overweight KOSPI Within EM Meanwhile, we remain long the Bloomberg Asia-Pacific Semiconductor Index and short the S&P 500 Semiconductor Index. This trade has produced a 7% gain since its initiation on June 13, 2019. The Bloomberg Asia-Pacific Semiconductor index has 12 stocks. Samsung and TSMC account for 38% and 37% of the index, respectively. The S&P 500 Semiconductor Index has 13 stocks. Intel, Broadcom, Texas Instruments and Qualcomm are the top five constituents, together accounting for nearly 77% of the index. Although the US and China may reach a temporary trade deal, the US will continue to restrict sales of tech products and high-end semiconductors to China. As a result, these US semiconductor companies, most of which are IC designing companies, will likely experience a more subdued than expected recovery in sales. Ellen JingYuan He Associate Vice President ellenj@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report "The Global Semiconductor Sector: Is A Cyclical Upturn Imminent?" dated June 13, 2019, available at ems.bcaresearch.com 2 https://www.guancha.cn/ChanJing/2019_09_21_518748.shtml http://www.cac.gov.cn/2019-10/23/c_1573361796389322.htm 3 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report "Chinese Auto Demand: Time For A Recovery?" dated October 17, 2019, available at ems.bcaresearch.com 4 https://www.canalys.com/analysis/smartphone+analysis 5 Please see US Equity Strategy Special Report "Defying Gravity," dated November 4, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com