For two years, China stocks have been a one-trick show. Tech ripped. The rest flatlined.
Morgan Stanley thinks that shifts now. And they put a price on it.
Earnings Catch Up With Estimates
Most China news has been about Alibaba, Tencent, and the AI race with the US. Below all that noise, a small shift just took place.
In Q1, firms in the MSCI China A Onshore Index kept missing forecasts. That index tracks big mainland firms.
But the gap is much smaller now. It fell to 12.5% in Q1. The prior quarter saw a gap of 23.2%.
That's still ugly. But it's the first real sign in years that the floor is in.
China stocks have priced in years of misses. A smaller miss gap means firms are starting to keep pace with what Wall Street had baked in.
The bank's team, led by Laura Wang, told clients in a Tuesday note that the back half of the year looks more upbeat. Their take: Chinese firms are spending big on plants and gear. That cycle is starting to show up in sales.
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Where The Money Is Going
The sectors that ride this wave are not the ones most US investors think of when they hear "China stocks."
The bank named three: robots, battery gear, and AI data centers. Those are the picks-and-shovels names. They win when other Chinese firms spend on plants and tools.
Exports are up too. Prices are starting to climb again. That ends a long stretch of falling prices.
There's a rules-based tailwind, too. China cracked down on the price-war chaos in e-commerce. The bank thinks that gives firms room to make cash again. Less racing each other to zero.
Yuan swap losses are still a drag. The yuan is China's local cash. When firms swap dollars for yuan, they often lose a bit on the math. But the bank thinks even that eases from here.
What To Watch
The new Q2 2027 target on the CSI 300 sits at 5,400. The index tracks 300 of China's biggest mainland stocks. The target is about 9% above the Tuesday close.
Investors get a live test of the thesis this week. Alibaba reports before US markets open Wednesday. Cloud sales are set to speed up. Tencent is on deck for a sixth straight quarter of double-digit gains.
If those numbers come in clean and the bounce holds through the summer, the rally stops being a tech-only story. That's been the gap for a long time.
Watch one thing past the tech names. Track if the smaller cap names in the CSI 300 join the party. That would be the real green light.
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