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Feature: Eastern Promise
Perilous Paths to China
Rebecca Fannin
09/01/2005

Compare their performance with the active approach taken by the San Francisco–based Matthews China Fund, an equity mutual fund founded by veteran Asia money manager Paul Matthews. It managed to post annualized returns of 16.2 percent during the past three years before falling 1.77 percent as of late May. Like most China investments, the $850 million fund is extremely volatile; it plunged 40 percent in the spring of 2004. But in a universe where instability is the norm, Lipper, Reuter’s analytical division, ranks it the top-performing China regional fund for the five years ending May 31. The fund’s success seems to stem largely from seeking dominant companies in growth industries—and from the fact that among its top holdings are some well-established companies based in Hong Kong, including Swire Pacific and Bank of China.

All securities in China are, at bottom, equity based, and the market risk, absent any way to diversify
it away, is nearly impossible to hedge.
Most of the excitement over China is predicated on its growth, but there are those taking a more contrarian approach. In the urban real estate market, a notorious bazaar where only true insiders should venture, Alexander Shang, a partner with the private equity firm Phoenix Capital Partners in New York and Beijing, is looking not to the boom, but to the bust. He has begun raising a fund to invest in distressed real estate; he plans to build out the interiors of buildings left as shells by bankrupt property developers. While he has not specialized in real estate before, he believes his extensive China experience gives him a 50-50 chance of turning others’ downsides into an upside. Shang says he has already spotted one likely opportunity: a huge real estate project left abandoned in the bustling southern Chinese manufacturing center of Shenzhen.

Those who have invested successfully in China share one trait in common: access to exceptional local knowledge. With this in mind, private investors looking to profit from the country’s boom would do well to do hire only the most experienced, active managers—which will usually lead them to the private equity community. Juan Meyer, executive vice president at the Greenwich, Conn., branch of the multifamily office Asset Management Advisors, agrees. “The only avenue we have found that makes sense is private equity,” he says. His family office invested 10 years ago in China Management, a $250 million private equity fund that has stakes in 27 fast-growing Chinese consumer companies. His firm’s capital in the fund has doubled in the past four years, primarily from returns garnered through public listings. Of the limited options, private equity offers the highest returns and lowest risk, he notes.
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