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Xi's Reform Carrot Could Be Catalyst for an All-In China Rally

China’s 64-year-old leader is handing out some nice sweeteners, after extending presidential term limit.

Xi's Reform Carrot Could Be Catalyst for an All-In China Rally
Porcelain cups featuring portraits of Chinese President Xi Jinping, left, and former Chinese leader Mao Zedong stand on display at a store window in Beijing, China. (Photographer: Giulia Marchi/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg Gadfly) -- Call it the carrot and stick. 

After the National People's Congress repealed presidential term limits, allowing Xi Jinping to rule beyond 2023, China's 64-year-old leader is handing out some nice sweeteners.

Two major announcements in the past 24 hours show the pace of financial reform is quickening. As Bloomberg News reported in January, China will indeed merge its banking and insurance watchdogs. At the same time, a $15.8 billion share sale by Agricultural Bank of China Ltd. signals the process of shoring up state-owned lenders' balance sheets is underway.

The People's Bank of China is the biggest winner of the merger, which aims to prevent regulatory arbitrage -- exploiting loopholes in the system to avoid unwanted restrictions. Functions previously performed at the two regulators, such as drafting rules and prudential oversight, will now be handled by the central bank.

As I've written, the combination really amounts to a hostile takeover of the insurance industry. 

More than political risk, ballooning state-owned-enterprise and local-government debt is the key concern that has prevented global investors from going all-in on China.

Beijing is nervous that deleveraging will spark a bond sell-off. After last October's party congress made curbing debt a policy priority, the 10-year government bond yield briefly topped 4 percent for the first time since 2014. 

Xi's Reform Carrot Could Be Catalyst for an All-In China Rally

So here comes the cash-rich insurance industry to help with an orderly unwinding of China's massive corporate debt pile. The industry's fast-growing investment portfolios now amount to 15 percent of GDP. Only 35 percent of holdings are in bonds, according to China Insurance Regulatory Commission data.

In other words, if a bond rout ever transpires, whether triggered by local government financing vehicles retiring debt or by global jitters, the PBOC can round up insurance companies for some bond-buying national service.

With the 10-year yield having stabilized at around 3.85 percent after November's wobble, that prospect should reassure global investors.

Meanwhile, Agricultural Bank said it aims to raise as much as 100 billion yuan ($15.8 billion) in what would be the biggest-ever follow-on share offering by a Chinese company. It will sell stock to seven state-linked entities including Central Huijin Investment Ltd. and the Ministry of Finance, already major shareholders of China's third-largest lender. 

The sale kills two birds with one stone. First, Agricultural Bank has the weakest capital buffer of the big four lenders (the others are Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd., Bank of China Ltd., and China Construction Bank Corp.) so the cash injection underscores the government's resolve to keep the banking system safe.

Xi's Reform Carrot Could Be Catalyst for an All-In China Rally

Second, the private placement alleviates market concerns that Chinese banks will tap the public market for capital, an option that would add to supply and put pressure on their stock prices. Agricultural Bank's Hong Kong-listed shares surged 5.1 percent as of the midday trading break, the most in a month.

The benchmark MSCI China Index has recovered well since the global market rout in early February, gaining about 9 percent this year. Still, Chinese stocks could go a lot higher if concerns over financial risks recede. After all, banks account for about 15 percent of the index and remain inexpensive, trading at an average of once book.

Xi's Reform Carrot Could Be Catalyst for an All-In China Rally

So where's the stick? China may be trading short-term gain for long-term pain, as Gadfly has noted previously. Away from financial markets, the billions behind the Great Firewall may see their freedom of expression further constrained.

But as long as bull spirits are in the ascendant, investors on the outside have no reason not to cheer.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Shuli Ren is a Bloomberg Gadfly columnist covering Asian markets. She previously wrote on markets for Barron's, following a career as an investment banker, and is a CFA charterholder.

To contact the author of this story: Shuli Ren in Hong Kong at sren38@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Matthew Brooker at mbrooker1@bloomberg.net.

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