Emerging boom or bubble?
William R. Thomson
Mar 1, 2007
INTRODUCTION
Foreign capital continues to
flow at near record levels into Asian and other emerging stock
and bond markets. Is it a boom based on the healthy growth of
these economies - or is it a liquidity-driven bubble that is
destined to burst eventually, creating distress that could make
the 1997 financial crises in Asia and other regions appear mild
by comparison?
The Business Times invited
experts from different backgrounds and with differing views of
emerging market prospects to comment after the Institute of International
Finance (IIF) in Washington warned that investors who appear
to be taking a fairy-tale view of continuing global economic
stability could be in need of a wake-up call.
Total capital flows into stocks
and bonds, plus bank loans and business investment in 30 emerging
markets around the world reached nearly US$502 billion last year,
only slightly below the record US$509 billion in 2005, and will
stay high this year, said the IIF.
Portfolio equity flows to emerging
markets have more than doubled over the past 10 years. They reached
over US$70 billion last year (of which Asia accounted for some
US$40 billion) and are expected to moderate only slightly to
US$63 billion this year.
Investment in emerging bond
markets is meanwhile running at over US$100 billion a year (of
which Asian emerging markets receive roughly one third) and will
also continue at high levels.
Surging capital flows reflect
abundant global financial liquidity, and this pool could shrink
as central banks in Europe and Japan continue to tighten monetary
conditions, said the IIF. There are other risks to emerging markets,
such as increasing geo-political tensions with potential effects
on the real economy and on market sentiment and risk appetite;
uncertainties about the duration and severity of the ongoing
housing slump in the US, and the ever-present potential of huge
global current account imbalances igniting a disorderly adjustment.
The emerging market boom is
being driven not just by the usual groups of yield-hungry institutional
investors such as pension funds, insurance companies and mutual
funds but also by hedge funds acting on behalf of central banks
from Asia and elsewhere that are diversifying foreign exchange
reserves 'covertly' out of US Treasury securities into stocks
and bonds, one of our experts suggested. China has also become
a major factor in emerging market investment, he suggested.
The consensus was that the
party will go on until it ends - because few are eager to leave
before then.
PARTICIPANTS in the roundtable
Moderator: Anthony Rowley,
BT Tokyo correspondent
Panelists:
Mark Mobius, president of Templeton Emerging Market
Funds and a globally recognised authority on emerging markets
Ernest Kepper, former senior World Bank and International
Finance Corporation official and Wall Street investment banker
who now heads an Asian financial consultancy
William Thomson, chairman of Private Capital Ltd,
Hong Kong and senior adviser to Franklin Templeton Institutional
Hong Kong and Axiom Opportunities Fund, London
Anthony Rowley: The IIF says that investors in emerging
markets are pricing assets 'as if the Goldilocks global environment
will continue undisturbed' into the indefinite future. This is
strong stuff coming from an organisation that speaks for many
of the world's leading financial institutions. Does it mean we
looking at an emerging market bubble?
Mark Mobius: Our friends at the IIF have generally
focused on bond markets and it is easy to conclude that the current
spread of emerging markets debt instruments versus US Treasuries
seems to have gone too far when one first looks at how that spread
has come from over 1,000 basis points (over 10 per cent) to less
than 200 basis points.
Also, anyone who remembers
the Argentina debt default and other defaults in places like
Russia must think that bond investors are out of their mind to
be purchasing emerging market bonds which are paying less than
2 per cent above US Treasury bonds.
But conditions have changed
and the macroeconomic environment and conditions in emerging
markets have strengthened dramatically since the Asian crisis
period in 1997. Looking at the numbers, it is reasonable to assume
that emerging market bond prices should be substantially lower
than they were during those crisis times.
Turning to equities, although
share prices have increased strongly in recent years, so have
(company) earnings. This means that although price/earnings ratios
and price to book value ratios have risen, they do remain reasonable.
Of course, no one can predict
the market direction and a bear market could start at any time.
However, the good news is that bear markets are shorter in duration
than bull markets and bear markets go down a smaller percentage
than bull market increases. Global economic conditions are positive
and countries have made substantial strides in reforming their
economies.
Moreover, emerging markets
continue to report strong macroeconomic growth and are implementing
structural reforms. Taking a long-term view, emerging markets
continue to offer investors an attractive investment destination.
The role of emerging markets in the global economy has grown
significantly in recent years. These countries have made fundamental
improvements to their economies and the changes are here to stay.
These developments mean that emerging markets investments contain
good opportunities.
William Thomson: I believe the IIF has hit it pretty
well on the head this time. Globally, assets are priced to perfection:
investors are overwhelmed by complacency and the concept of risk
has been comprehensively, but temporarily, junked. There are
different ways of measuring complacency but most of them involve
the willingness of investors to absorb ludicrous amounts of debt.
We see that in the case of
individuals in the Anglo Saxon property markets, especially the
UK, now that the US is correcting, where people are taking on
mortgages that can only be paid over generations, a situation
reminiscent of Japan in the late 1980s.
Personal debt levels are unsustainable
levels in the advent of any disruption to personal circumstances.
Similarly, in the corporate level we see private equity investors
assuming greater and greater levels of debt of riskier assets.
The potential shocks that could
upset the applecart include a changing of the acceptance of the
present pace of globalisation in the developed world where middle
and working class standards of living are stagnating at best.
US average wages are lower now in real terms than they were 35
years ago whilst the returns to capital are now above the 7-15
percent GDP range where they have always been contained for over
100 years, and politicians are likely to be increasingly susceptible
to calls to amend the terms of trade in coming years. Geo-political
factors, especially a deterioration of the Iran/Iraq situation
in the Middle East, remain a key potential flashpoint that could
roil the markets.'
Anthony: The Emerging Markets Bond Index (EMBI)
spread reached an all-time low of 170 basis points in December
last year while the Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI)
equity index hit a record high at the end of the year. What has
driven these up to such heights, and can they be sustained?
Ernest: The main reason for the increase in the flow
of funds to the equity markets of emerging economies is that
many central banks have made an unofficial or unannounced decision
to shift their investment from US Treasuries. This has led to
a shift to euro bonds and secondly to American and European corporate
securities. But because those markets have natural limits, the
real returns are being gained in emerging markets. This is not
a matter of any change in the basic matrix of the economy or
the financial system in any developing country; it is merely
an excess of liquidity grown out of the willingness or the decision
of the central bankers of most countries to reduce their investment
in US Treasuries.
These flows are hard to trace
because central bankers are often reticent about going direct
into the market and it is big money, so they will put large amounts
of money with a hedge fund or with what we call the 'deep hole'
investors.
More and more trades are moving
off the NYSE because big investment banks can avoid fees by matching
buyers and sellers.
Also, many funds do not want
to have a record or open disclosure of where they are investing
money or when they are withdrawing it. By using a bank or brokerage
houses and getting an internal match, transactions do not have
to be reported.
Money can be invested without,
say, Japan having to record the fact that they are investing
in the Indonesian stock exchange.
(The emerging market boom)
is also being driven by liquidity generated in China. I understand
that even the social security funds and pension funds and the
government funds of China are committing billions of dollars
to hedge funds and investing in emerging markets because of the
desire to gain double-digit returns. China has attracted almost
a billion dollars a week since it joined the World Trade Organisation.
This is very welcome because it fuels the new issues market in
China which is very strong and growing with global investment
banks competing to see to who can get the most IPOs (initial
public offerings).
There is excess liquidity and
China is taking advantage of it. One of their major banks just
raised over US$50 billion. That money cannot be invested immediately
in China and so it will need to be channelled into other short-term
investments.
So, we have this great liquidity
developed by central banks shifting away from US Treasuries and
we have the excess liquidity of China which has raised hundreds
of billions in the past five years in IPOs. All this money has
to be placed somewhere and nothing compares to the possibility
of injecting it into a developing country. In cases like Argentina,
which has given Europeans and Americans a 70 per cent haircut
on over US$100 billion of debt, we see no reticence on the part
of banks and investors to come back into the Argentine economy
to buy stocks, participate in IPOs and even enter the bond market.
Mark: Strong investor confidence, continuing fund
inflows, robust corporate earnings, favourable financing conditions,
stock market appreciation and a cultivating macroeconomic environment
with strong economic growth are among the key factors that have
contributed to low spreads.
While I do not believe that
we are seeing a 'bubble', as I mentioned before, no one can predict
the market direction and a bear market could start at any time.
However, the good news is that bear markets are shorter in duration
than bull markets and bear markets go down a smaller percentage
than bull market increases.
William: Long term, I am a bull on emerging
markets and believe institutional investors should generally
be overweight them to capture their higher underlying growth
rates. However, after the bull run of recent years, this is a
time for greater caution and selectivity for the reasons given
previously. I would expect far greater volatility than in the
recent past and that argues for a long/short approach.
Anthony: Do you agree with the IIF that the
apparent lack of concern by many investors about the implications
of a possible adverse turn in the world macroeconomic outlook
points to vulnerability and that 'more prudent market risk management
is essential'?
Mark: In the imperfect world that we live in, there
will always be investors who are hoping to make a quick profit
with little regard to stock fundamentals. And yes, of course
it would be great if everyone practised more prudent risk management
but then that could lead to lower market liquidity and volatility.
For the value investor, volatility is a good thing since it gives
an opportunity to purchase stocks at below their intrinsic value
and sell above their intrinsic value.
William: Again, I fully concur. Let us look
at what is going on in the derivatives markets. Global GDP is
about US$50 trillion and according to the BIS total derivatives
have expanded from US$200 to US$400 trillion a couple of years
ago: that is eight times world GDP. A decade ago that would probably
have been less than one times GDP.
No one can possibly know what
is in all those black boxes but we are likely to find out one
day that they are in Warren Buffett's terminology weapons of
wealth destruction. In the meantime, the 30-something wunderkinder
who put them together will be viewing the destruction they have
created from their villas in the South of France paid for with
their multimillion dollar bonuses.
Anthony: Do you expect IPO activity in emerging
markets to continue at high levels in 2007?
Mark: Yes, we do expect IPO activity to remain strong.
This is because equity prices have risen and company controllers
find it attractive to list their stocks. In addition, emerging
markets remain an attractive investment destination and IPOs
allow investors to gain exposure to companies in these markets.
Moreover, the cultivating macroeconomic environment has led to
higher earnings leading many companies to expand their operations
and raise funds. Obvious markets include China and Russia.
William: I would look for continued strong
activity from Asia until or unless there is a sharp correction.
Prices are attractive for issuers.
Anthony: Will the seemingly ever-expanding
supply of new portfolio assets from emerging markets force a
price correction, especially at a time when global liquidity
could be squeezed by monetary tightening in Europe, Japan and,
possibly, the US?
Mark: There is always that possibility. We have now
seen a massive flow of liquidity into emerging markets and this
has pushed prices up. As mentioned, the healthy earnings of emerging
market companies has made the price rises sustainable. However,
any reversal of the money flow or a reversal of company earnings
could present problems and a market correction or even a bear
market.
William: Prices can correct at any time when
fear begins to override greed.
Anthony: So, when does the party stop?
Ernest: Nobody can stop it. A central bank which has
a surplus from exports to the United States simply has to invest
the money. The game is to get the money invested quickly and
to go for double digit returns. The biggest players in the game
are hedge funds because they are not on the same regulatory reporting
basis as mutual funds and they are much larger.
If they are producing double-digit
returns, it cannot be from investing in corporate bonds or US
Treasuries. It cannot be by investing solely in real estate so
it must largely be in emerging markets. As long as there is excess
liquidity - as long as there are no major bankruptcies in countries
or among major corporates there is no reason to draw out large
amounts of equity.
The only other possibility
is that a major hedge fund gets embroiled in some derivative
activity which could become unwound and scare the market and
cause people to withdraw. Or, it could be that more merging markets
will follow the example of Thailand, or Malaysia at the time
of the 1997 financial crisis, and impose controls on short-term
capital movements.
KEY POINTS
Emerging markets have 'strengthened
dramatically' since the Asian crisis of 1997
The concept of risk (in emerging
markets) has been comprehensively junked
Central banks have become significant
players in the emerging markets boom, using hedge funds as a
front Emerging market investors are assuming that the 'Goldilocks'
environment can continue undisturbed
14 February 2007
Business Times Singapore
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