China's stock
market rose 28.4% this year through May 15, 2006
with Korea up 10.5%, Taiwan climbing 12.4% and
Japan advancing 11.1%, according to Morgan Stanley
Capital International. Diversified mutual funds
investing across Asia are up 15.4% on average
in the same period, according to investment researcher
Morningstar Inc.
The healthy returns reflect a flood of new investment
into the region from U.S. buyers who see the potential
payoff from Asian emerging markets outweighing
inherent risks, and are convinced about Japan's
economic recovery after more than a decade of
fitful sputtering. U.S. stocks, in contrast, have
gained 3.6% so far this year. In addition, Asia's
robust trade with North America and Europe is
fueling local investors.
And China, with its magnetic-like effect on trade
and investment, has been the chief beneficiary.
"China is becoming one of the forces that
drive the Asian regional economy," said Richard
Gao, co-manager of the Matthews China Fund .
"The purchasing power from China is growing
rapidly. China has become the biggest export destination
for Korea and Taiwan, and also accounts for a
large portion of exports from Japan."
China's industrial output is in high gear. The
country is a processing center, drawing materials
and parts from countries across Asia. Manufacturers
in South Korea, Taiwan and Japan have moved assembly
lines to China, where consumer goods and electronics
are much cheaper to make.
China needs this basic manufacturing business
to fund its own pressing infrastructure needs.
So China imports high-end technology and equipment
from places like South Korea, Taiwan and Japan,
plus resources from Southeast Asia and Australia.
Components are then assembled into finished goods
in Chinese factories and sold primarily to North
America and Europe.
Taiwan's computer makers are a case in point.
The industry, which accounts for 80% of the world
market, has steadily shifted production to China.
Last year, Taiwan's lone remaining notebook computer
plant closed down, its tasks transferred across
the Taiwan Strait. The empty facility in northern
Taiwan will become a warehouse. "It's a tremendous
pull, reflected in the changing trade patterns,"
said Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Washington-based
Institute for International Economics, assessing
China's growing role as a factory to the world.
In turn, the
world supplies China with cash for housing, highways,
power plants, telecommunications systems and other
projects that boost living standards -- and, not
incidentally, its own nascent consumer class.
China's economic growth is making many Chinese
wealthy, and Beijing wants to encourage them to
spend. Long-term government policy envisions a
country that is less dependent on exports and
foreign investment in favor of self-reliant domestic
growth.
"Eventually,
China's huge domestic consumption will become
the driving force for the overall economy,"
said Gao, the Matthews fund manager.
Chinese demand for property, financial services
and high-end goods and services will surge, Gao
added. "China is going to be one of the key
importers of luxury products in the world,"
he predicted, adding that displays of affluence
are increasingly visible even now. "Imports
are moving up from basic materials and industrial
products to luxury items."
China is also
headed up-market in both quality and type of goods
it makes, said Peter Morici, a business professor
at the University of Maryland. "You're going
to see them move into durable goods -- cars, engines,
air conditioners, appliances, industrial equipment,
machine tools," he said.
Providers of technical products and engineering
will continue to profit from the China trade,
Morici added. Suppliers of commoditized products
are in danger of being marginalized.
"Invest
in companies that are selling high-end products
and not commodity products," Morici said.
"Whatever is easy to make, the Chinese will
be doing soon -- if they're not already. They
have cash to buy any know-how they want."
The biggest
risk that China and its neighbors face is economic
weakness in the U.S. Indeed, China's best customer
is showing signs of stress. Higher interest rates
are beginning to cool U.S. property markets and
slow corporate profits, and soaring gasoline prices
are contributing to inflation concerns. A weaker
U.S. dollar only exacerbates the problem. China's
currency is pegged to the dollar, so imports are
costlier at the same time export growth may slow,
squeezing Chinese manufacturers and state coffers.
"The key
to understanding what's going on in China is to
view China not as a small exporting competitor,
but as an economy with a tremendous demand for
infrastructure," said Curtis Mewbourne, co-head
of emerging markets at bond-fund giant Pimco.
"Neighboring countries are going to ride
along." But as with any business, a
customer base that doesn't grow as fast as spending
needs leaves only tough choices. China can't yet
expect its own population to pick up the slack,
nor can it look to other parts of Asia for comfort.
As long as prices stay competitive and consumers
feel confident, then it can continue.
Source: www.marketwatch.com