It has been hard to make money in Chinese stocks. Unlike the U.S. market, even the country’s tech giants have disappointed investors in the past few years.
But investors focusing on something more boring—dividends from some of China’s least-loved companies—did far better. Cash returns to shareholders from listed Chinese companies over the past three years amounted to more than two trillion yuan, the equivalent of $275 billion, according to Goldman Sachs. Most of that came through dividends, though they also have stepped up stock buybacks.
The total return on an MSCI gauge tracking Chinese stocks with high dividend yields has outperformed the broader MSCI China index by around 28 percentage points over the past three years. State-owned enterprises with some stock-market presence have been especially rewarding. By contrast, an imploding housing bubble and regulatory crackdown have sunk shares of many private-sector Chinese companies.
The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index, which tracks Hong Kong-listed Chinese stocks such as tech behemoths Tencent and Alibaba, has lost around 40% of its value in the past three years. A separate index tracking state-owned enterprises with listings in Hong Kong, on the other hand, has risen 2% over the same period. Even this year, which has seen Chinese equity markets rebound, the SOE gauge has done better than the broader market.
Some standouts: Oil company Cnooc has tripled in value since the end of 2021, while carrier China Mobile has surged by 59%. These state companies are usually in what are considered old economy sectors such as banking and energy. While they don’t offer exciting growth opportunities, what they have instead is stable cash flows and lower regulatory risk.
Read more on livemint.com