What stands out about China and South Korea in 2026?
As we look across Asia in early 2026, one of the clearest stories is the sharp divergence in market performance. South Korea has been the standout. The market rose 76% in 2025 and added another 47% year‑to‑date as of late February. This follows a decade of underperformance – what many called the “Korea Discount”. Now, we’re seeing a genuine structural re‑rating from a very low base. So, the natural question is: Can this rally sustain? And the answer lies in four key areas.
First, valuations remain compelling. South Korea trades at around 1.8x book, and 9x forward earnings – still well below global peers, despite triple‑digit earnings growth led by semiconductors.
Second, South Korea is at the centre of the AI semiconductor supercycle. AI-related high‑bandwidth memory exports are up 44% year‑on‑year, and strength is broadening into AI-peripheral sectors, like autos, defence, nuclear, shipping, and materials. This is no longer a narrow, chip‑only story. It is a wide‑ranging industrial upgrade.
Third, governance reforms are gaining traction. The government’s ‘Value‑Up’ Program, mandatory treasury‑share cancellations, and expanded fiduciary duties are reshaping corporate behaviour and narrowing the structural discount.
Fourth, the policy and flow backdrop is supportive. Foreign underweights are reversing, and new domestic tax incentives are encouraging investors to rotate away from property and overseas equities into their home market. But, for balance, we must acknowledge the biggest medium‑term risk: Korea’s earnings momentum depends heavily on the durability of the semiconductor cycle. If pricing or demand cools, earnings could soften quickly. Even with that risk in mind, Korea remains one of the most attractively valued developed markets globally. For long‑term investors, this still feels like the early to mid‑stages of a multi‑year re‑rating.
Now: China. A very different picture. After a strong 2025, China enters 2026 with macro resilience, but market fragility. Chinese equities are up only around 1% year‑to‑date, dramatically lagging South Korea and Taiwan. One important driver is global: there has been a major rotation into AI hardware which has disproportionately benefitted South Korea and Taiwan, but not China.
Domestically, China also faces headwinds. Consumption remains soft, with retail‑sales growth slowing to 1.3% late last year. The property sector continues to weigh on household confidence. Policy support has been modest, limiting any sharp demand recovery. Export momentum has softened, especially relative to tech‑leveraged North Asia. These pressures are clearest in tech. The Hang Seng Tech Index is down 20% from its peak and over 10% year‑to‑date. But this is not the full story.
Under the surface, China’s structural growth engines remain intact – rising research and development intensity, a decisive push toward technological self‑reliance, and large‑scale upgrades across manufacturing and energy. And, importantly, earnings are stabilising. Consensus now expects a mid‑teens rebound in 2026. Competition has eased, the ‘anti‑involution’ push has reduced destructive price wars, and margins are improving.
Crucially, this does not rely on a GDP surge. It reflects companies operating more efficiently. The emerging Five‑Year Plan reinforces this shift: AI, semiconductors, digital infrastructure, green energy, advanced manufacturing, a stronger social safety net, and a reduced dependence on property‑driven growth.
The message is clear: China is moving from a ‘growth at all costs’ message towards quality, resilience, and productivity. The hyper‑growth era is gone – but a more balanced, innovation‑led China is emerging. For patient investors, that can be genuinely powerful.
Where is the Asia ex-Japan team seeing opportunities today?
In South Korea, we’ve approached the rally with discipline. Our South Korea overweight has been reduced from +20% (last year) to +9.5% (today), mainly trimming positions that rallied the hardest, including stockbrokers and certain banks. We remain confident in our current Korean holdings, which still offer compelling value.
Now, China, where the opportunity set is becoming more interesting and more diverse. We see four distinct areas where opportunities are emerging.
Firstly: consumer‑related businesses. These were major underperformers, but many now look to have bottomed. Recent results have been ‘less bad’ than feared – small misses, but broadly in line – and expectations are finally realistic.
Second: commodity‑linked sectors. In select areas, earnings have started to turn up. It’s early, but the direction of travel is more encouraging than it has been in years.
Third: overlooked tech and lesser‑known AI beneficiaries. We’re seeing a growing group of companies operating in areas like robotics, AI‑enabled hardware, and advanced industrial technologies that have been largely ignored by mainstream investors. These include businesses developing next‑generation sensing systems, firms producing precision components for AI and robotics, and industrial players expanding from traditional sectors into emerging fields such as clean energy technologies and even early‑stage aerospace applications. And much like the ‘hidden names’ that emerged in early 2025, we believe new, under‑the‑radar innovators will continue to surface in 2026 as China’s industrial upgrade accelerates and AI becomes embedded across manufacturing, automation, and next‑generation infrastructure.
And fourth: yield. In this environment, anything offering a sustainable 4 to 5% yield or more remains highly attractive. These stocks provide stability, cash flow, and downside protection while we wait for sentiment to shift.
And a brief note on Thailand. Sentiment is depressed, valuations are at multi‑year lows, and we see selective contrarian opportunities — but this is targeted, not a broad call.
What are the key risks? And what’s the bottom-line for investors?
Geopolitics remains the biggest wild card. Fresh conflict flashpoints raise concerns around oil, inflation, and global risk appetite. A sustained spike in energy prices, currency pressures, or shipping disruptions would weigh on Asian exports and growth.
South Korea faces additional volatility given its large rally, heavy retail leverage, and sensitivity to global demand. China’s biggest swing factor remains regulatory confidence. Investors can price slower growth – but unpredictable regulation can reset sentiment very quickly.
The bottom line is this: South Korea offers a powerful structural re‑rating story, driven by governance reform and AI‑led earnings momentum – with semiconductor cyclicality the key risk to watch. China’s outlook is more nuanced, but with improving earnings, supportive valuations, clearer policy direction, it is far from uninvestable.
For active investors, dispersion is high, opportunities are plentiful, and disciplined stock selection remains the best way to navigate 2026.
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