
China Gets a Major Reprieve on Tariffs. Don't Expect a Reversal.
Beijing is turning out to be one of the biggest winners from the Supreme Court's ruling against many of President Donald Trump's levies.
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Beijing is turning out to be one of the biggest winners from the Supreme Court's ruling against many of President Donald Trump's levies.

I reiterate a Buy rating on the iShares China Large-Cap ETF, citing compelling valuation and bullish technical momentum. FXI trades at a blended P/E of 13.27 versus SPY's 24.43 and yields 2.37%, reflecting both value and geopolitical risk. The recent Supreme Court tariff ruling triggered a bullish key reversal in FXI, highlighting resilience amid U.S.-China trade policy uncertainty.

China ETFs enter the Year of the Horse with cheap valuations, AI momentum and policy support, but property woes, weak consumption and geopolitics may keep volatility elevated.

Caprock Group LLC acquired a new position in shares of iShares China Large-Cap ETF (NYSEARCA:FXI) during the undefined quarter, according to the company in its most recent Form 13F filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The firm acquired 36,647 shares of the exchange traded fund's stock, valued at approximately $1,426,000. A

iShares China Large-Cap ETF (NYSEARCA:FXI - Get Free Report) saw some unusual options trading activity on Wednesday. Stock traders purchased 471,766 call options on the company. This represents an increase of 168% compared to the typical volume of 175,990 call options. Institutional Investors Weigh In On iShares China Large-Cap ETF Hedge funds have recently modified

ABC Arbitrage SA bought a new position in iShares China Large-Cap ETF (NYSEARCA:FXI) during the undefined quarter, according to its most recent Form 13F filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The firm bought 407,107 shares of the exchange traded fund's stock, valued at approximately $16,748,000. iShares China Large-Cap ETF comprises

The Leveraged BABX ETF For A Continued Recovery In Alibaba And Chinese Stocks

Kevin Sneader, President of APAC ex‑Japan at Goldman Sachs, speaks with CNBC's Emily Tan on the sidelines of the 19th Asian Financial Forum. He points to investor appetite for AI driving flows into Asian markets, while noting key nuances for standouts such as China and South Korea.

I upgraded iShares China Large-Cap ETF to Buy, citing robust local capital flows and policy support. FXI offers over 22% consensus upside and a 2% dividend yield, with key holdings out-yielding local deposits and bonds. Portfolio EPS growth is projected at 11% for 2026 and 15% for 2027, with a YE26 PE of 13x, yielding an attractive PEG of 1x.

A surge in exports powered China's growth last year, defying expectations that a trade war with the U.S. would hobble the world's second-biggest economy. China's gross domestic product expanded 5% last year when adjusted for deflation, according to data released Monday by the country's National Bureau of Statistics. That met Beijing's official growth target and is in line with the 5% real GDP growth notched in 2024.

GDP grew 4.5% in the October to December period. Full-year economic output came in at 5%, meeting the official target of around 5%.

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China's consumer inflation picked up modestly in December, while factory-gate prices remained in contraction.

Alibaba, NetEase, and hotel operator H World Group are seeing bullish technical indicators.

China's official gauges of factory and construction activity unexpectedly moved back into expansion territory in December, helping Beijing anchor its growth target for 2025.

China's economy ended the year on a slightly less gloomy note as manufacturing, services and construction activity all improved in December.

Chinese tech stocks, led by Alibaba, fell as industrial profits dropped and geopolitical risks rose. But some see potential entry points.

I reiterate a sell rating on assets that track the main Chinese indices, citing an unattractive risk-return profile and persistent macro headwinds. China is prioritizing technological leadership in AI over real economic growth, risking further economic slowdown and instability. FXI trades at 12x earnings, in line with its 5-year average, offering no compelling valuation discount despite heightened risks.

Exports, and global spending on artificial intelligence, will be critical for the market and for growth.

Once labeled “uninvestable,” China's markets have rebounded this year. Stocks, onshore bonds, and the yuan are trending higher, signaling renewed investor confidence.