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By the editors of Without
Borders, Casey Research
After passing much of 2008 standing thankfully on the sidelines, we believe
that with current valuations, opportunities have returned for putting capital
back into long-term positions in emerging markets. In fact, we believe that
emerging markets will recover faster and outperform developed markets over
the long term.
In our December 2007 edition of Without Borders we wrote:
"So much money has been sloshing around the globe in search of an "above
average" return that even risky assets have been bid up tremendously.
At this stage, however, with new holes in the financial dike showing themselves
almost weekly - more holes, we suspect, than officialdom has fingers - the
money flows are building toward a reversal. This will hammer the emerging markets
the hardest because, historically, in times of crisis, capital packs up its
bags and goes home. When that happens, shares of good companies get sold at
the falling bid simply because the seller must get liquid, whether to calm
his fears or to cover his losses elsewhere. Asset prices become screaming passengers
strapped into a luge ride.
"This creates opportunity, of course. Even though the economies of
all the most prospective emerging-market countries are strong enough to weather
any likely storm, their financial systems aren't. This is emphatically
true in India, China, Brazil, and other fast-track economies. Even so, when
foreign financial capital has fled, the physical and human capital will remain,
it will still be valuable, and good investments will be cheap in the extreme.
But the opportunity won't be available for everyone - just the
investors who've been patient."
Then in April 2008, we gave our presentation on "Bottom Fishing for
Stocks in Emerging Markets," during which we highlighted that the single
most important factor in emerging-market stock markets is capital flows.
In the emerging markets, the time to invest is when capital has fled the country.
We know we disappointed the crowd when we said that there was not one emerging
market we found attractively priced and that shorting in emerging markets is
almost impossible, so our strongest recommendation was to do nothing.
It's quite a skill to do nothing and do nothing well. We sidelined
ourselves and watched, staying away from emerging markets for most of 2008.
But now... finally, the catastrophic sell-off in global financial markets
had the effect that we expected: there was a huge sucking sound coming from
public equity and currency markets in Russia, Brazil, China, Taiwan, Malaysia,
India, South Korea, Colombia, Chile, etc. Foreign institutional investors came
face-to-face with the reality of lower risk tolerance and deleveraging and
were forced to sell. Everything.
The ensuing flight to quality left emerging markets and their currencies
decimated... but herein lies the opportunity. We just hope the IMF and
World Bank will run out of money or leave them alone, thereby preventing the
return to the boom/bust cycle of the 1990s.
Bullish long-term outlook
Remember, the sell-off in emerging-market equities, bonds, and currencies
reflects a rush for the exit sparked by global deleveraging and a need to raise
cash, rather than any change in the fundamentals. When the current turmoil
subsides, we believe that emerging markets will fare better than developed
markets and will outperform the latter over the long term. As such, we find
that current valuations are solid entry points for putting our hard-earned
capital into long-term positions. Consider:
* Emerging-market economies will prove resilient during this economic
slowdown and may account for all of world economic growth in 2009 as developed
markets slow to zero.
* Emerging economies are not nearly as dependent on consumer spending
and almost not at all exposed to consumer credit.
* Emerging markets by and large suffer neither the demographic imbalance
nor the entitlement imbalance that plague the developed nations.
* Corporate and personal balance sheets in emerging markets are stronger
than those in the developed markets.
* In many emerging markets (Brazil, most of South East Asia, India)
as well as several African nations, domestic or regional demand is now more
important than exports for GDP growth.
* Among stronger economies, high foreign-exchange reserves and lower
foreign debt levels act as insurance against the global slowdown; reserves
have grown six-fold to over $4 trillion over the last ten years.
* Over the past ten years, emerging-market companies have produced
higher profits with lower (but not necessarily low) leverage, while profits
expanded annually by double digits during the past ten years.
Cash Rich, Resource Rich
Compared to the late 1990s Asia crisis, the present situation is much more
stable for emerging markets. While we expect current account surpluses to deteriorate
given the global slowdown and recessionary pressures, emerging markets will
face this challenging period with cash in their bank accounts.
The importance of this change cannot be overstated.
Much like individual households that stash away something for a rainy day,
many emerging-market countries now have a greater reserve of wealth with which
to buffer financial market headwinds. This gives them the option of taking
fiscal stimulus measures to offset the effects of a developed-markets slowdown without
having to go into debt. While we decry these neo-Keynesian actions as throwing
water on an electrical fire, historically they have boosted share prices.
As part of their fiscal stimulus, we also expect to see higher infrastructure
spending by countries with the financial muscle to do so. China, for example,
which is projected to have more than 200 cities with populations exceeding
one million people by 2025, up from just 23 in 2005, announced in early November
2008 a two-year infrastructure investment and stimulus package of up to 4 trillion
yuan ($586 billion). While much of this stimulus will come in the form of strong-arming
banks, there will be substantial cash injections in the Chinese economy, and
they have the cash to do it: highways, railroads, and airports. The government
hopes that this stimulus package will also encourage increased consumer consumption.
All this is good news for raw-materials companies, one of which is an undervalued
Chinese cement company that is a cornerstone of our portfolio. (Learn more
about this company here.)
The turning point
Emerging markets will be the catalyst for global economic recovery,
not the West. Like China, many emerging markets that have been saving for a
rainy day have the cash and political will to spend on development projects
that require raw materials. Others, like Chile and Angola, have the raw materials
to sell. Even more so, a few countries like Brazil and Saudi Arabia have both.
The economy will get jumpstarted with these countries initiating their own
trade without the leadership or consumptive traditions of the Western world.
Perhaps even more pointedly, we foresee a highly inflationary environment
over the next several years... all of the dollars with which President
Obama will be flooding the world will have to find a home somewhere. This will
more than likely spark another commodities boom, which is supported by the
world's ever-growing demographics, resource scarcity, and climate-change
legislation.
As such, resource-rich emerging markets are going to find themselves being
the future home to foreign investment capital again. Institutional capital
will trickle, then gush into these markets as the world wakes up one day and
finds oil and copper trading at twice their present levels.
Consequently, today's emerging markets will be the net recipients of
the future inflation that is being created by the West.
Capital Flow Conclusions
We have long said that capital flows are the most important indicator for
emerging equity markets. Investor outflows in the second half of 2008 already
equal one-third of the total inflows into emerging-market equity funds over
the prior five years. This is a positive sign for contrarians looking for a
bargain. There has been a bloodbath, and this is a buying signal.
We recognize that the ride will likely be bumpy. Fiscal stimulus, trillion-dollar
deficits, and politicoramus bickering may cause a roller-coaster ride to the
top... but the evidence strongly suggests that, once institutional funds
finally realize that U.S. Treasuries are a fool's bet, remaining capital
will be on the hunt and flowing back into emerging markets. The window
is open, and we are dedicating our efforts to finding the most undervalued
companies with rock-solid management and balance sheets.
In times of economic crisis, prudent investors are well advised to diversify
their portfolio... ideally, some of it in global stocks and real estate. Without
Borders brings you the inside scoop from two globetrotting ex-CIA agents
with privileged connections around the world. They'll suggest sound international
investments, as well as the most beautiful, stable, safe, and cheap places
to live and invest.
Kick the tires of Without Borders risk free for 3 months, for
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