The search for Chinese consumer bellwethers is understandable, but futile. Wary of official data, investors are scouring corporate earnings reports for insights. Yet sales of iPhones or Kentucky Fried Chicken offer only partial and misleading clues about the world's second-largest economy.
Government statistics suggest China is decelerating and rebalancing. Gross domestic product expanded at its slowest rate in six years in the third quarter, and traditional drivers like construction are weak. Consumers are supposedly picking up the slack: retail sales were up almost 11 per cent year-on-year in September. But these figures, which include government and army purchases, are viewed with scepticism. So investors are looking elsewhere.
The signals are fuzzy, however. Take Apple's last quarter, in which China revenue doubled to $12.5 billion. Chief Executive Tim Cook sees no evidence of any slowdown. But he also points out that, excluding the iPhone, Chinese bought fewer smartphones. Apple is not even a bellwether for its own industry, let alone the economy.
Alibaba is another unreliable guide. The value of transactions on the e-commerce giant's websites grew a healthy-looking 28 per cent in the most recent quarter. Yet if online orders are just replacing conventional offline purchases, the overall economy may be no better off.
By the same measure, companies which fare badly in China are as likely to be suffering from their own mistakes. Poor sales at Yum Brands, the KFC and Pizza Hut owner long seen as a leading indicator for Chinese consumption, probably owe more to food scares and changing tastes than a slowing economy. For every LVMH, which blamed China's stock market crash for its weak results, there's a Nike, which saw sales in China jump 30 per cent in the three months to August.
The problem will only increase with the growth of the service sector, much of which operates beyond the scope of big public groups. Ultimately it's fanciful to think that the performance of a handful of companies could serve as a reliable guide to the habits of 1.4 billion people. 'Bellwether' originally described a sheep which leads the rest of the flock. That's an image investors should probably avoid.
Government statistics suggest China is decelerating and rebalancing. Gross domestic product expanded at its slowest rate in six years in the third quarter, and traditional drivers like construction are weak. Consumers are supposedly picking up the slack: retail sales were up almost 11 per cent year-on-year in September. But these figures, which include government and army purchases, are viewed with scepticism. So investors are looking elsewhere.
The signals are fuzzy, however. Take Apple's last quarter, in which China revenue doubled to $12.5 billion. Chief Executive Tim Cook sees no evidence of any slowdown. But he also points out that, excluding the iPhone, Chinese bought fewer smartphones. Apple is not even a bellwether for its own industry, let alone the economy.
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By the same measure, companies which fare badly in China are as likely to be suffering from their own mistakes. Poor sales at Yum Brands, the KFC and Pizza Hut owner long seen as a leading indicator for Chinese consumption, probably owe more to food scares and changing tastes than a slowing economy. For every LVMH, which blamed China's stock market crash for its weak results, there's a Nike, which saw sales in China jump 30 per cent in the three months to August.
The problem will only increase with the growth of the service sector, much of which operates beyond the scope of big public groups. Ultimately it's fanciful to think that the performance of a handful of companies could serve as a reliable guide to the habits of 1.4 billion people. 'Bellwether' originally described a sheep which leads the rest of the flock. That's an image investors should probably avoid.