China first to emerge from the gloom
Companies in China appear best placed to emerge soonest and with least damage from the global coronavirus pandemic, according to a survey of Fidelity’s equity and fixed income analysts. Among those expecting the virus to lower earnings for the companies they cover, 85 per cent of our China analysts expect that hit to be contained to the first half of the year, compared to just 42 per cent of analysts covering other regions who expect the impact to extend into the second half. One industrials analyst reports: “In general my companies are expecting China to recover by the second half of the year, and production there is [already] back to around 70 per cent of capacity,” while a healthcare analyst notes: “It’s a very fluid situation but in China things are back to a 95 per cent manufacturing capacity.”
And despite 87 per cent of China analysts expecting the virus to damage profitability, the highest of any region, they expect the magnitude of that hit to be milder than other regions.
Since China was the first country afflicted by the virus it seems logical it will recover the fastest. But the time taken to resume business activity in countries struggling to cope with the outbreak will also depend in large part on the containment measures taken by individual governments. The Chinese authorities’ decision to impose strict travel restrictions in affected areas relatively early in the outbreak seems to have ensured the country will face a broad-based shock to the system, but will recover relatively quickly and with less of an impact to earnings overall.
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The Fidelity Quarterly Sentiment Tracker for March 2020 features 185 responses from 152 analysts (analysts who cover more than one region or sector take the survey once for each sector/region combination). The survey was conducted between 7 March and 12 March.