Can China Save Europe - And Europe Save China?

 | May 11, 2015 05:32

Over the past decade, while US pundits and politicians soapboxed their Kabuki laments over Chinese trade policy and misbegotten currency regimes, Europe has quietly emerged as China's largest trading partner and a strategic counterbalance to perceived US economic hegemony.

Perceived, because just last fall the IMF recalculated its projection of China's 2014 GDP, returning to it the torch of "Worlds Largest Economy", a handle it carried over 19 of the past 20 centuries. Factoring in the GDP of the runner-up (EU), the composite scale between China and the EU accounts for roughly a third of the world's economic output.

As we look for China to continue to take the next steps in transitioning its maturing economy away from being driven by unsustainable construction and infrastructure growth to greater breadth of domestic consumption, Europe is well positioned to capture the lion share of trade spoils, with China also greatly benefiting from their deep financing relationship with its largest foreign investor base - Europe.

With trade flows between Europe and China reaching over $1 trillion in recent years, the immense commonality of their vested interests in one another has only grown, primarily at the expense of more traditional trade partners - namely, the US.

Below are a few highlights from a dated - but highly recommended, research note from Deutsche Bank (here ), describing the burgeoning strategic economic relationship that exists between the EU and China - and which likely will strengthen over the coming years.

  • Trade in goods between China and Europe has almost doubled over the past decade, with Germany strongly positioned as China's largest EU trading partner, accounting for roughly half of EU exports and a third of EU imports.
  • Foreign direct investment (FDI) between the two economies has been disproportionate, with the EU emerging as the largest investor in China, while Chinese direct investment currently accounts for less than 1 percent of the EU's total inbound FDI. This investment asymmetry presents a large opportunity in Europe for Chinese capital, should further progress be made with a free trade agreement. Since 2011, Chinese investors have increased their FDI stock by more than four times within two years.
  • Symbiotic process manufacturing relationships between the EU and China has continued to evolve to benefit both economies. Intermediate goods that need to be processed further for final consumption composed approximately 60 percent of EU exports to China. Moreover, Europe is China's single biggest provider of foreign inputs for its export industry, as China sources roughly a third of the value-added used in its exports from abroad.
  • Europe is well positioned to benefit from the transition in the Chinese economy to greater domestic consumption, as consumption goods nearly doubled as a share of EU exports to China between 2007 and 2012. EU consumer goods have been supported by the demand of an increasingly affluent middle class in China, as many European car manufacturers realize China as their largest market.
  • Europe presents a significant opportunity for China with further adoption of the renminbi (RNB). Infrastructure through financial institutions will make it possible to foresee the RMB settlement increase to as much as 40% of EU-China bilateral trade by 2024, from less than 10% currently.
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With concerns about the slowdown in China continuing to build with each passing week's diminishing data dumps, we remain focused on the bigger picture narrative unfolding - that of remaking China's system of governance to potentially afford more sustainable economic growth in the future, while titrating the colossal hybrid economy further from communism to capitalism.

In our opinion, the popular view by the policy wonks - that of a painful economic rebalancing at the foot of decades worth of breakneck growth and over-investment, largely ignores the capacity of the People's Bank of China (PBOC) to actively stimulate growth and mitigate liquidity concerns - through this inevitable slowdown, while continuing to develop greater interdependent economies of scale with their largest trading partner. The net effect - we believe - should go a long way towards smoothing this transition and shifting the world's balance of power further east.

Chinese President Xi Jinping has made the strategic partnership with Europe an early focus of his term, with Europe committing last year to bilateral talks on a free trade agreement with China. As trade disputes are often contentious and present real risks to further developing a common economic interest, the long-term benefits to both economies far outweigh whatever short-term political hurdles may emerge or are postured at the podium from tangential concerns: i.e. Germany may push Greece to the limits over a new debt deal, but ultimately will not risk a fracture in the fragile EU - as they clearly have the most to lose.

As both central banks move to aggressively loosen monetary policy, two overarching questions remain in the financial markets:

1. Will a successful transition in China continue to build out the foundation for a lasting bull market in equities, and;
2. Will it also provide Europe with another lifeline away from the deflationary conditions still swirling around the old world?

Although we agree that in times of conspicuous central bank influence and intervention, the correlation between the relative health of a country's economy and their respective markets is increasingly difficult to discern, for both Europe and China today, their equity markets should play a leading role in foreshadowing the character of the next chapter of this massively influential bilateral relationship.

Despite growing skepticism by equity analysts and pundits of the recent surge in Chinese stocks over the past year, we continue to like their prospects and view its equity markets as a leveraged position on China successfully engendering greater consumer consumption, as stocks provide a broad wealth transmission mechanism to a growing percentage of the population.

Along these lines, we've approached the August 1982 consolidation breakout in the S&P 500 as a prospective road map for a sustained move higher in the Shanghai Composite index. To a large extent, the structure and momentum congruences have played out in the SSEC, with the index even exceeding our own expectations and doubling over the past year, as a violent breakout rally confounds both the policy and equity bears.

From our perspective, the transition in China is well on its way to maintaining their exceptional legacy of surpassing presumptions over the past four decades. Of course, notwithstanding the considerable set-backs ushered in through Marxism in the mid-20th century, this is par for the course in China over the last few millenniums.