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Thawing India-China ties drive hunt for potential stock winners

Decades of frosty relations between the world’s two most-populous nations are thawing as both countries consider themselves unfair targets of President Donald Trump’s “America First” trade wars.

August 17, 2025 / 15:19 IST
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Fund managers are now scouring Indian industries such as pharmaceuticals and electronics for firms with Chinese supply lines or export channels that may be among key beneficiaries.

India’s stocks are trailing most of their global peers this year but one set of companies may be about to see a resurgence: those with links to China.

Decades of frosty relations between the world’s two most-populous nations are thawing as both countries consider themselves unfair targets of President Donald Trump’s “America First” trade wars. Fund managers are now scouring Indian industries such as pharmaceuticals and electronics for firms with Chinese supply lines or export channels that may be among key beneficiaries.

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There have already been some winners. Shares of InterGlobe Aviation Ltd., which operates the India’s largest carrier IndiGo, jumped more than 4% last week on reports that direct flights between the country and China may resume as soon as next month. Car-part maker Minda Corp., which has a Chinese partner, and electronic-component manufacturer Kaynes Technology India Ltd., which imports key parts from China, both jumped more than 5%.

“Disputes will be over very soon and India will open the floodgates to Chinese investments,” said Ritesh Jain, founder of Pinetree Macro, a global asset-management company based in Calgary. “The scale and technology at which they operate will create new winners in India, and it’s important to be positioned accordingly.” Relations between India and China have been plagued for years by a fractious border dispute and conflicting geopolitical aims. A new round of skirmishes broke out in 2020 that led to the deaths of soldiers from both nations and calls for Indian consumers to boycott Chinese goods. Chinese weaponry also helped Pakistan in a recent military escalation with India.

That ill-feeling is now being offset by Trump’s chaotic tariff policies that have encouraged Beijing and New Delhi to find common ground. These tariffs currently include a charge of 50% on Indian goods, and the threat of levies on China of at least 54%. In addition to the expected resumption of direct flights, the two countries are in talks to revive border trade, and Prime Minister Narendra Modi is expected to visit China later this month, where he will meet Premier Xi Jinping.