GLOBAL INVESTING: The bullish case for emerging markets and European equities

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GLOBAL INVESTING: The bullish case for emerging markets and European equities
The ECB has reflated the eurozone with its 'shock and awe' bond purchases.

Dubai - Best money-making opportunity in 2017 could be in Hong Kong property developer shares

By Matein Khalid

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Published: Sun 2 Apr 2017, 9:33 PM

Last updated: Sun 2 Apr 2017, 11:36 PM

Emerging-market equities have outperformed the S&P 500 index and the flagship asset class index fund is up 12.5 per cent in 2017. The US dollar and the 10-year US Treasury bond yield have both fallen since the March 14 FOMC rate hike, the ideal macro tailwind for emerging markets such as China and India. Not even the latest 10 per cent hit in crude oil prices, revelations of Russian cyber-espionage in the US Presidential elections, a money market liquidity squeeze in Shanghai, Trump's tirades against Mexico and China and the arrest of South Korean Park Geun-hye has derailed the asset class' bullish momentum.
The fact remains that the US Dollar Index's spectacular 30 per cent rise in the past five years has made many emerging market currencies grossly undervalued in the global foreign exchange market. The Malaysian ringgit trades at 1998 Asian flu lows. The Russian rouble is half its exchange rate against the US dollar when the Kremlin ordered its troops to invade Georgia in 2008. Brazil offers the world's highest inflation-adjusted interest rates. The Egyptian pound was deeply undervalued at 19. The Federal Reserve has hinted that it will not choke the global liquidity cycle with draconian rate hikes even as both global earnings growth rates and industrial production improve. Emerging markets are a hedge against the nosebleed valuations in US equities and Donald Trump's legislative woes in Congress.
The best money-making opportunity in 2017 has been to invest in Hong Kong property developer shares, who have all hugely benefited from a tsunami of Mainland Chinese money that has led to a spectacular bull market in Hong Kong residential and commercial property. Wharf Holdings, Kerry Properties and Wheelock are all up 30-40 per cent in the past three months alone. Hong Kong may no longer be a Crown Colony of the British Empire but its capitalist elite still know how to mint money in brick and mortar! The Hong Kong dollar peg enables local asset prices to benefit from the lower Uncle Sam bond yields. Apart from Hong Kong, the most profitable country funds to own in the past three months have been Poland, Argentina, South Korea and Mexico, all up 18-24 per cent. Russia has not performed in 2017 due to the oil crash, nor has Saudi Arabia. Nigeria, as in 2016, is a nightmare.
I concede there are pocket of froth and overvaluation in specific emerging markets. India's Nifty is far too expensive for my taste at 17 times forward earnings, two sigma above its 10-year mean valuation. Despite Trump's Obamacare debacle, I would not rule out the Republican Party's obsessive interest in lowering the 35 per cent US corporate income tax and the Federal Reserve's determination not to fall behind the "inflation curve". This means King Dollar may be down but is definitely not out - not yet. The financial markets have dramatically scaled back their expectations of tight money from the Yellen Fed in 2017. My tactical emerging market bets for April? Thailand, Argentina, Chile and China. The best short? The South African rand as Zuma reshuffles his Cabinet on the eve of the another ANC leadership change that will reshape the Rainbow Nation. Nkosi sikelel' iAfrika!
"Things fall apart, the centre cannot hold, mere anarchy is loosened upon the world"; William Butler Yeats' poetry could well describe the psychological zeitgeist in Europe on the eve of the Dutch, French and German elections. Yet the worst of all possible worlds, Dr Pangloss' nightmare scenario, did not happen in Hollande. The political centre held in the Dutch election and will hold in both Paris and Berlin. This means the euro is burdened with an excessive risk premium that will fade as 2017 progresses. The real story in Europe is that inflation expectations have bottomed and the ECB has successfully reflated the eurozone with its "shock and awe" bond purchases. Purchasing manager indices new orders have begun to rise in both France and Germany. This is the reason even Marine Le Pen has toned down her Frexit threats. This means German Bund yields can and will move higher once Macron wins the Élysée Palace and I celebrate the Treaty of Rome in my own way by owning the Italian country index fund at book value! In any case, European equities offer an attractive risk/reward calculus at a valuation of 14.9 times earnings and 1.8 times book value.
The writer is a global equities strategist and fund manager.


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