Will China Mean An Annus Horribilis For HSBC Holdings plc And Standard Chartered PLC In 2016?

China could be a big drag for HSBC Holdings plc (LON: HSBA) and Standard Chartered PLC (LON: STAN) next year.

| More on:

The content of this article was relevant at the time of publishing. Circumstances change continuously and caution should therefore be exercised when relying upon any content contained within this article.

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More.

I reckon some of the FTSE 100‘s big banks are looking like big bargains for 2016. But HSBC Holdings (LSE: HSBA) and Standard Chartered (LSE: STAN) aren’t among them. And the reason? In one word, China.

In 2014, around 80% of HSBC’s profits came from Asia and that was mainly Hong Kong, China and economies dependent on them. And at Standard Chartered the figure was similar, again with China and its dependencies making up the bulk. But now? China is in trouble.

A few years ago few of us really understood the extent of the structural problems there. I know I certainly didn’t, and I thought the government’s growth target of 7% per year for the next few years was reasonable. After all, China was opening itself up to private enterprise and the grip of central control was slowly-but-surely loosening.

But no…

Except it wasn’t. Now that economic reality isn’t going as well as the people in control ordered, they’re tightening their grip again. Once the party leaders were extolling the virtues of the country’s fledgling stock market. But now they’re blaming the free market enterprise leaders for a stock market bust that was inevitable after the failure of state-ordered attempts to keep the surges going.

Guo Guangchang, often spoken of as “China’s Warren Buffett“, was once lauded as a champion of China’s push for wealth. But he’s now seen as one of the chief scapegoats for 2015’s stock market crash and has been facing lengthy police questioning.

The BBC’s China editor Carrie Gracie made the point this week that “no economy has achieved high income status with a closed financial system“. And though China’s centrally-controlled capital allocation and state-sponsored stimulus have been responsible for recent annual growth in excess of that 7% per year, it’s hard to avoid the obvious conclusion that capital can’t be allocated efficiently by such means and that centrally-planned growth is just not sustainable.

And that points to the real drag on China’s economy – its state owned enterprises (SOEs). They’re horribly inefficient behemoths, financed in part by forced loans from the country’s banks, bogged down by unserviceable debt, and unable to compete in a free market environment. But getting rid of them isn’t on the table, as they’re what give Beijing’s rulers the economic control that keeps them in power.

Giving up power?

I can’t see the Chinese government accepting the need to wind down its SOEs any time soon, despite the obvious fact that the move from state ownership to private ownership has stimulated genuine long-term economic growth in every country that has tried it. But until it happens, any long-term 7% annual growth target remains an illusion.

And in the meantime, we really can’t tell how much toxic debt (from both state-directed lending and China’s still-overheated property market) banks like HSBC and Standard Chartered really hold. Right now I wouldn’t touch any company heavily invested in China, and certainly not the banks.

Alan Oscroft has no position in any shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK has recommended HSBC Holdings. We Fools don't all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.

More on Investing Articles

Petrochemical engineer working at night with digital tablet inside oil and gas refinery plant
Investing Articles

Up 50% in a month! Meet Quadrise, the soaring UK penny stock that offers an alternative to oil

Mark Hartley takes a closer look at a British penny stock that envisions a future less dependent on crude oil.…

Read more »

Senior couple crossing the road on a city street. They are walking with shopping bags while Christmas shopping.
Investing Articles

How much do I need in a SIPP for a £500 monthly passive income?

Looking to earn a reliable passive income from your SIPP? Royston Wild explains how this could be possible with some…

Read more »

Hand of person putting wood cube block with word VALUE on wooden table
Investing Articles

A P/E ratio of less than 7. Is this a red-hot value share to consider now?

James Beard uses a popular tool to identify a UK share that’s potentially undervalued. But he reckons judgement is also…

Read more »

Businessman with tablet, waiting at the train station platform
Investing Articles

£5,000 invested in cheap BP shares a month ago is now worth…

BP shares have rocketed by double-digit percentages over the last month. Can the FTSE 100 oil giant keep rising? Royston…

Read more »

This way, That way, The other way - pointing in different directions
Investing For Beginners

Why the next 4 weeks are going to be big for Barclays shares

Jon Smith points out upcoming earnings and ongoing geopolitical turmoil and explains how Barclays shares could be impacted in the…

Read more »

British flag, Big Ben, Houses of Parliament and British flag composition
Investing Articles

Scottish Mortgage has made a fortune on SpaceX and Tesla! Here are 5 UK stocks it owns

This FTSE 100 investment trust holds 101 growth stocks from around the globe, but only five from the UK. Which…

Read more »

Businessman hand stacking up arrow on wooden block cubes
Investing Articles

I think UK investors are missing out on this overlooked Dow Jones stock

Jon Smith flags a US stock in the Dow Jones index that has a price-to-earnings ratio over half the average,…

Read more »

Shot of an young mixed-race woman using her cellphone while out cycling through the city
Investing For Beginners

2 FTSE 100 shares that could outperform this year regardless of geopolitics

Jon Smith notes the volatile market but explains how to pick FTSE 100 shares that can be fairly insulated to…

Read more »