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Wall Street Says Investors Are Missing Huge Huawei Trade Risks

Published 2019-05-17, 11:29 a/m
Updated 2019-05-17, 05:19 p/m
© Reuters.  Wall Street Says Investors Are Missing Huge Huawei Trade Risks

(Bloomberg) -- Global equity investors are likely underestimating what may be immense damage across a variety of industries triggered by the U.S.-China trade dispute, particularly involving the latest Huawei Technologies Co. escalation, Wall Street analysts say.

The Trump administration putting Huawei -- and dozens of its affiliates -- on an export blacklist means “the U.S. government has halted China’s 5G push,” and is transforming the trade war “into a digital one,” Sean Darby, Jefferies’s chief global equity strategist, wrote in a note. The move may have ramifications well beyond the tech sector as well, analysts at MKM wrote.

And a better-than-expected reading of a key U.S. sentiment index released on Friday is very likely masking the impact of higher tariffs, according to Michael McDonough, Bloomberg’s Chief Economist, Financial Products. The University of Michigan’s preliminary sentiment index release was “calculated with responses mostly collected before the announced tariff increase and the final print will almost certainly be revised lower,” he said. There may be a “continued erosion in sentiment, which could throttle consumption and place a headwind on growth,” McDonough said.

Jefferies’s strategist Darby said that the progression from tariffs to direct actions against single Chinese companies and their inter-linked supply chains "has a wide-ranging impact on profitability that investors will find difficult to quantify.”

The Huawei ban “holds back the development of 5G (the largest global capex project) and the growth of Internet-of-things,” he said. It also “completely disrupts the global tech supply chain. The macro and micro implications are immense.”

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Darby noted that 5G provides a “huge advantage” for “everything from the use of autonomous vehicles to AI eco-systems,” while “enormous amounts of money” are also required to install fiber-optic and operating systems.

China has been a 5G technology leader, but Chinese companies have an Achilles heel -- their reliance on U.S. semiconductors and components with no alternatives, he said. Those include baseband chipsets for handsets, from Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM) Inc. and Intel Corp (NASDAQ:INTC).; semiconductors for base stations, from Xilinx Inc (NASDAQ:XLNX).; RF/power amplifier chipsets, from Skyworks (NASDAQ:SWKS) Solutions Inc., Qorvo Inc., Avago Technologies Ltd. and Macom Technology Solutions Inc., and optical components, from Lumentum Holdings Inc. and Finisar Corp.

The Huawei blacklist “is a very important development and we suspect it has fallen through the cracks,” Cowen senior policy analyst Chris Krueger wrote in a note. He said that “a framework has now been put in place that could be extremely broad, disruptive, and restrictive.”

He sees the Commerce Department’s license process as “likely to take some time,” and suspects “nearly all requests will be denied.” He added that talks in Beijing with U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin are still unscheduled.

“It is very hard to see any off ramps before the June 28 Trump-Xi meeting in Japan at the G-20,” Krueger said. “A few more weeks like we had this week and that meeting may not even materialize.”

‘Dark Place’

“The most important question is what is the U.S. Government trying to accomplish,” MKM analyst Michael Genovese wrote in a note. “If the answer is to destroy Huawei and slow the development of 5G networks in China, then the U.S.-China relationship is likely headed to a dark place with major geopolitical ramifications beyond the tech sector.”

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But Genovese tends to believe the move may be a “negotiating tactic.” MKM assigns a 50% probability that Huawei is permanently banned from purchasing key U.S. technology, and hopes there’s a 50% probability the order is walked back. Genovese downgraded NeoPhotonics Corp. on Huawei uncertainty, helping send shares plunging 28% to the lowest in four years.

Earlier, China’s state media signaled a lack of interest in resuming trade talks, while the government said stimulus will be stepped up to buttress the domestic economy. That helped send U.S. stocks broadly lower. Deere & Co. slumped as much as 6% as trade worries dimmed the machinery giant’s outlook; that followed Thursday’s warning from Walmart (NYSE:WMT) Inc. about increased tariffs leading to increased prices. Qorvo fell 4% in Friday trading and Lumentum dropped 4.3%.

On Friday morning, Acacia Communications Inc. said it plans to fully comply with the Commerce Department’s Huawei order. As sales to Huawei have been less than 1.5% of total revenue, it sees a “de minimis impact” from losing those sales in the second quarter. But Acacia cautioned that “developments or regulatory actions against Huawei may have a broader impact on overall conditions” in its markets.

(Adds economist comment in 3rd paragraph; updates share prices starting in the 12th paragraph.)

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