Emerging Markets 03 (Sep 16 - Dec 24)

Re: Emerging Markets 03 (Sep 16 - Dec 18)

Postby winston » Thu May 11, 2017 7:46 pm

This Is What Can Kill the Emerging Market Rally

by Sid Verma

As bonds, stock and currencies rally, some see overheating
DoubleLine is latest firm to make bullish emerging-market call

Investors put more than $2.5 billion in emerging-market bond funds in the week to May 3, a 14th week of net gains, according to consultancy EPFR Global, while equity funds took in $2.4 billion last week, the seventh consecutive week of inflows.

"Flows have been rotating out of U.S. high-yield debt and into emerging markets, which has papered over the vulnerability of emerging markets to higher rates, a stronger dollar and weaker commodities"


"EM will temporarily struggle with the twin drag of lower commodity prices and China deleveraging policy"


Source: Bloomberg

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles ... gn=markets
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Re: Emerging Markets 03 (Sep 16 - Dec 18)

Postby winston » Tue May 16, 2017 7:16 pm

Red Hot Emerging-Market Stocks Are Showing Signs of Overheating

by Blaise Robinson

After the MSCI Emerging Market Index’s surge of about 17 percent this year, momentum indicators suggest the rally is losing steam.


“The index is now getting into a strong resistance zone with the descending trend line and also the 2014 and 2015 highs. These levels won’t be easy to break.”


Source: Bloomberg

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles ... gn=markets
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Re: Emerging Markets 03 (Sep 16 - Dec 18)

Postby winston » Mon May 22, 2017 12:39 pm

Hot Spots in Emerging Markets: Brazil, Egypt, Indonesia

by Lilian Karunungan, Yumi Teso, Aline Oyamada

Brazil’s political turmoil endures as president fights probe
Egypt plans to sell Eurobond as its copes with dollar shortage

Central banks in South Africa, Nigeria, Ghana, Thailand, South Korea, Ukraine, Hungary and Colombia are scheduled to decide monetary policies.

Egyptian policy makers unexpectedly raised interest rates Sunday in an effort to contain one of the highest inflation rates across emerging markets.


Source: Bloomberg

https://finance.yahoo.com/m/d5ee8d45-10 ... rging.html
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Re: Emerging Markets 03 (Sep 16 - Dec 18)

Postby winston » Sat May 27, 2017 6:40 am

Can Emerging Markets Continue Rallying?

by Debbie Carlson

Stable commodity prices, particularly for crude oil, benefit emerging market countries because many are commodity producers and exporters.


Flows this year through March were $11 billion into mutual funds. That's the strongest in asset flows in several years in the first quarter."


The markets are mired in supply challenges that have become a headwind for the region. Even though some raw materials like oil are stabilizing, she doesn't expect another commodities boom.


The valuations "a headfake," noting the composition of the MSCI Emerging Markets index is weighted 24 percent to financials and 25 percent to information technology, specifically hardware IT.


Source: U.S.News & World Report

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/emerging ... 31248.html
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Re: Emerging Markets 03 (Sep 16 - Dec 18)

Postby winston » Wed Jun 07, 2017 11:54 am

Foreign investors to pour nearly $1 trillion into emerging markets in 2017: IIF

By Dion Rabouin

Non-resident capital inflows to emerging markets should reach $970 billion this year, a 35 percent increase from 2016, the Institute of International Finance said in a report released on Tuesday.

All told, the institute is expecting to see overall net capital outflows, which includes resident and non-residents from emerging markets, of $130 billion.

It had estimated outflows from its group of 25 emerging market economies would total $490 billion this year in its February report.

The total level of capital outflows is greater than the difference between resident and non-resident flows because of forex reserves and net errors and omissions, IIF said.


Source: Reuters

http://www.reuters.com/article/us-emerg ... US%20Money
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Global Economic Data & News 02 (Nov 15 - Dec 17)

Postby behappyalways » Sat Jun 10, 2017 4:04 pm

Awaking with Brics

Four BRICs don’t quite make a wall

Brazil, Russia, India and China have done even better than forecast—thanks mainly to China


EMERGING markets have been through a lot over the past four years. The “taper tantrum” in 2013 (prompted by fears of a change in American monetary policy); the oil-price drop in 2014; China’s botched devaluation of its currency in 2015; and India’s botched “demonetisation” of much of its own currency in late 2016 (removing high-value banknotes from circulation).

But 2017 has started more brightly. Indeed, for the first time in two and a half years, the world’s four biggest emerging economies (Brazil, Russia, India and China, known as the BRICs) are all growing at the same time.

Russia’s GDP bottomed out at the end of 2015 (using seasonally adjusted figures) after the longest recession since the 1990s. It has expanded at a gathering pace for the past three quarters.

Higher oil prices have helped, though Russia cannot profit fully from the improved market by ramping up sales without violating the production limits that caused the market’s recovery.

During the collapse of the rouble in late 2014 and early 2015, it was easy to forget some of Russia’s economic strengths, such as its consistent trade surpluses and its substantial foreign-exchange reserves (which never fell below $300bn).

As Russia has regained its footing, the rouble has rebounded, gaining 15% against the dollar over the past 12 months, making it one of the world’s best-performing currencies.

Brazil’s torment has been even more prolonged. Its economy contracted for eight consecutive quarters as commodity prices tumbled, a president was impeached and a corrupt political class was impugned. Brazil’s political scandals remain far from resolved, but at least the weather has improved.

Generous summer rains in states like Bahia contributed to a bumper harvest of soyabeans and corn in the early months of the year. That helped Brazil’s GDP expand by 1% in the first quarter (an annualised pace of over 4%). Since bumper harvests cannot be repeated every three months, some economists fear GDP may shrink again in the second quarter, but many forecasters believe growth will be positive for 2017 as a whole.

Faster growth has not jeopardised price stability. Rather, inflation has eased in Brazil, just as in Russia and India. Whether lower inflation will allow Brazil’s central bank to make further big interest-rate cuts partly depends on a new political furore engulfing Michel Temer, the president.

If that prevents the government from reforming social security and curbing fiscal excess, the central bank may be loth to soften its stance dramatically, lest fiscal indiscipline and monetary easing combine to weaken the currency and push up prices.

If inflation has been too high in recent years in Brazil, it has been too low in China. Thanks to downward pressure on prices and the currency, China’s economy actually shrank in dollar terms in 2016 for the first time in 22 years. But the deflationary threat has since receded and the yuan has strengthened this year against the greenback, as capital outflows have been tamed.

Indeed, China’s central bank may have resumed adding to its foreign-exchange reserves, which increased by $24bn in May, having declined by about $1trn since their peak in 2014 as capital fled.

Will the resumption of growth in Brazil and Russia (and the return of “dollar growth” in China) breathe new life into the BRICs brand? The term was coined by Jim O’Neill, when he was chief economist of Goldman Sachs, and took on a life of its own.

The countries’ leaders began holding an annual summit, inviting South Africa to join as an additional member. They also set up a development bank, with its headquarters in Shanghai but headed by an Indian, which now has operations in all five countries, having approved its first loan to Brazil in April.

(Lord O’Neill has always felt that South Africa, a country of only 56m people with a GDP of less than $300bn, was too small to stand alongside his original quartet. And so far this year, the fifth member’s fortunes have diverged from the others’, as South Africa’s economy slipped into a recession in the first quarter.)

Having christened the BRICs in 2001, Goldman Sachs later sketched out their futures over the next five decades in a paper entitled “Dreaming with BRICs”, published in 2003. The investment bank then upgraded those growth projections in 2011 in light of the BRICs’ strong performance over the previous decade. That proved to be a mistake.

Of the four economies, only China’s dollar GDP has kept pace with those optimistic 2011 projections (see chart). The others have fallen short of them by a combined $3trn.

A similar disappointment befell stockmarket investors. The BRIC equity index compiled by MSCI has lost 40% since its 2007 peak. In October 2015 Goldman Sachs folded one of its BRIC equity funds, meant for American investors, into a broader emerging-market product (“a more holistic solution in emerging-markets equity”, in its words).

These setbacks seemed to vindicate the curmudgeonly sneer cited by Peter Tasker, of Arcus Investment, dismissing the BRICs as a “Bloody Ridiculous Investment Concept”.

But if the BRICs have not sustained the euphoria of 2011, they have amply fulfilled the original “dream”, as articulated by Lord O’Neill in 2001 and quantified by his team two years later. Even after their recent tribulations, their combined GDP ($16.6trn) remains far greater than the Goldman team envisaged back in 2003 ($11.6trn).

Only Russia has failed to live up to those early expectations. China has easily surpassed them. In Brazil, growth was slower than Goldman Sachs projected but the country’s real exchange rate appreciated further than they imagined, boosting its GDP in dollar terms.

Moreover, at some point after 2015, the BRICs became unmodish enough to count once again as good investments. Since Goldman Sachs closed its fund, the BRIC stockmarket index has gained almost 20%.

The trickiest problem for the BRIC concept may be its final consonant. China contributed about half of the club’s GDP in 2001 and now accounts for fully two-thirds of it. China is also home to most of the group’s biggest companies. Eight out of the ten largest stocks in the MSCI BRIC index are from China, including Alibaba, Baidu and Tencent (a tech trio that have their own acronym, BAT).

As its markets grow and open up to capital inflows, China seems destined to become an asset class in its own right, one that is hard to contain in a “holistic” emerging-market fund, let alone a narrower four-country vehicle.

The biggest threat to the BRIC idea may not be the quartet’s economic shortcomings but the singular success of its largest member.

Source: The Economist
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Re: Emerging Markets 03 (Sep 16 - Dec 18)

Postby winston » Fri Jun 16, 2017 11:48 am

As Emerging Markets Retreat: 5 Currencies To Watch From Goldman

With the Fed's action widely anticipated and inflation risk, five EM currencies could be attractive, Goldman Sachs suggests.

Source: Barron's

http://www.barrons.com/articles/as-emer ... yptr=yahoo
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Re: Emerging Markets 03 (Sep 16 - Dec 18)

Postby winston » Fri Jun 30, 2017 8:15 am

BlackRock sees emerging-market rally fading in second half

“We might be slowly entering a period of quantitative tightening that the bond market might have to learn to digest.”


More than US$40bil of new investment has flooded into emerging-market debt funds during 21 straight weeks of inflows, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch research citing EPFR Global data.


Source: The Star

http://www.thestar.com.my/business/busi ... bsavhAu.99
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Re: Emerging Markets 03 (Sep 16 - Dec 18)

Postby winston » Fri Jul 07, 2017 8:12 pm

Additional Risk in Emerging Markets

The additional volatility in emerging-markets stocks is a reflection of the nature of these assets.

by Daniel Sotiroff

The higher volatility and deeper drawdowns attributed to non-U.S. stocks can come from several different sources.

One major contributor is foreign exchange rates.

Local economic policies, such as the United Kingdom's decision to leave the European Union, can also cause the returns of foreign stocks to jump up and down more than those listed in the U.S.


State-owned enterprises, or SOEs, can take different forms, and there is no clear qualifying standard when it comes to defining these institutions.

The risk here is that government stakes in a public company can introduce conflicts of interest between the government and public shareholders.


Market Collapse

Emerging markets typically feature little legal and regulatory oversight, have underdeveloped infrastructure, and are more prone to experience changes in government regimes.

This less stable nature not only lends itself to volatile stock prices, but can make investment in these countries expensive, and even lead to collapse and closure of entire markets.


Source: Morningstar

http://news.morningstar.com/articlenet/ ... yptr=yahoo
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Re: Emerging Markets 03 (Sep 16 - Dec 18)

Postby winston » Tue Jul 11, 2017 7:46 am

Four reasons emerging markets won’t see panic this summer, like they did in 2013

‘Despite the hawkish tone from the Fed and the European Central Bank, some of the most actively traded assets in emerging markets remain resilient’

In the week ending July 5, emerging market bond funds suffered net outflows for the first time this year, with foreign investors withdrawing US$70 million compared with inflows of US$1.8 billion in the week ending June 28.

Emerging market equity funds were hit hard too, with inflows tumbling to US$438 million, down from US$2.5 billion the previous week.


Exchange-traded funds (ETFs), which have become an increasingly important source of inflows into emerging markets, experienced outflows last week for the first time this year.


Comparisons with the 2013 taper tantrum are misguided.

Firstly, there are no signs of panic.

Secondly, the dollar index, a gauge of the performance of the greenback against a basket of its peers, has fallen 7 per cent since early January and now stands at its lowest level since early October.

Thirdly, developing economies are in better shape than they were just prior to the taper tantrum.

Fourthly, and perhaps most importantly, emerging markets have become less vulnerable to outflows of foreign capital because of the growing clout of domestic institutional investors which now hold the bulk of developing economies’ debt, particularly bonds denominated in local currency.


Cumulative inflows into emerging market bond and equity funds this year still stands at over US$100 billion


Source: SCMP

http://www.scmp.com/business/banking-fi ... ummer-they
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