Anothe " Buy High, Sell Higher" Recommendation. Where were all these "experts" in Nov ?
Emerging-Market Stocks Will Surge 39%, JPMorgan Says (Update2) By Michael Patterson
April 16 (Bloomberg) -- Emerging-market stocks will surge a further 39 percent this year as government spending and interest-rate cuts from China to the U.S. revive demand for developing nations’ exports, JPMorgan Chase & Co. said.
The MSCI Emerging Markets Index will climb to 900, the highest level for the 23-nation benchmark since Sept. 8, a week before New York-based Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.’s bankruptcy froze global credit markets and sparked an exodus from emerging- market assets, according to JPMorgan. The MSCI gauge added as much as 1.6 percent to a six-month high of 654 today, extending this year’s rally to 15 percent.
“There are significant tailwinds for emerging-market economies,†Adrian Mowat, the chief Asia and emerging-market strategist at JPMorgan in Hong Kong, wrote in a note. “As the evidence mounts, the bears are being dragged into the markets.â€
The prediction follows a six-week rally in emerging-market equities that pushed the MSCI index up 36 percent since March 2. Mowat joins Morgan Stanley strategist Jonathan Garner and investors including Templeton Asset Management Ltd.’s Mark Mobius in predicting developing-nation equities will rebound further from a tumble last year that dragged the MSCI gauge down a record 55 percent.
‘Cyclical’ Trade
Investors should buy shares in “cyclical†industries including technology that rely on economic growth, while selling so-called defensive stocks such as phone companies, Mowat wrote in the note dated yesterday. He recommended “overweight†positions in Taiwan, South Korea, Mexico, China and Thailand.
An overweight rating means investors should hold more of the shares than are represented in benchmark indexes.
Emerging-market stocks climbed today as investors speculated government efforts to revive economic growth are working. Turkey’s ISE National 100 Index rose 3.1 percent for the biggest advance in Europe, while Taiwan’s Taiex index led gains in Asia with a 2.1 percent increase. The MSCI index rose 0.2 percent to 645.31 as of 12:47 p.m. in London.
The Federal Reserve said yesterday that the contraction slowed across several of the biggest regional economies in the U.S. last month, with some industries “stabilizing at a low level.†The Fed has committed to buy or loan against everything from corporate debt, mortgages and consumer loans to government debt, after cutting its benchmark rate to zero.
While China’s economy expanded at the slowest pace in almost 10 years in the first quarter, growth in industrial production and investment has accelerated, adding to evidence that Premier Wen Jiabao’s 4 trillion-yuan ($585 billion) stimulus plan is working. Policy makers have cut their benchmark interest rate five times since September to help cushion the fastest-growing major economy from a slump in exports to the U.S. and Europe.
Favorable Policy
“For emerging markets we would argue that the environment may now be more favorable than pre-Lehman bankruptcy,†Mowat wrote. While economic activity is still below levels in the third quarter of last year, “policy is now very favorable,†he wrote.
Lehman, once the fourth-biggest U.S. investment bank, filed for bankruptcy protection on Sept. 15 after losses on mortgage securities drove away lenders and potential suitors. Financial companies worldwide posted more than $1.2 trillion of asset writedowns and credit losses since 2007, dragging the global economy into its first recession since World War II.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid= ... ingmarkets