New Straits Times

BUILDERS TO GAIN FROM US$323B SPREE

Government­s seen boosting spending on airports, high-speed rails, ports next year

-

TECH is so 2017. With at least US$323 billion (RM1.32 trillion) in infrastruc­ture spending in the pipeline in Southeast Asia and potentiall­y more expected over the next few years, 2018 could well shape up as the year of builders’ stocks from Indonesia to the Philippine­s that have been the laggards in a broader market rally this year.

Government­s are boosting spending on everything from airports to high-speed rails and ports to increase connectivi­ty and boost economic growth in what promises to be a boon for the region’s constructi­on companies.

In one of the more ambitious programmes in the region, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has earmarked an unpreceden­ted US$180 billion for infrastruc­ture to keep driving one of the world’s best-performing economies over coming years.

Malaysia and Thailand are also ramping up allocation­s to public works ahead of general elections next year.

“Infrastruc­ture has been under invested whether it’s clear water, clean air, energy, roads, ports, railways, education, healthcare — so there are tonnes of opportunit­ies,” said Ashish Goyal, head of emerging markets equities at NN Investment Partners (S) Ltd, which manages US$288 billion in assets.

The firm owned stakes in Indonesian constructi­on stocks, he said, adding that investors should watch for the pace of execution in the various countries.

UBS Group AG expects “changes in government policy and delivery on infrastruc­ture” to be among the region’s biggest themes for next year as growth in global trade faded, analysts including Ian Gisbourne wrote in a report dated November 28.

Constructi­on stocks on the MSCI Asean Index have risen an average of about 7.4 per cent this year in US dollar terms, about one-third the gain of the overall gauge, which is set for its best performanc­e in seven years. Technology shares have provided the biggest boost to the Southeast Asian index this year as global demand for electronic­s returned.

Some builders are already rallying in anticipati­on of the rewards they will reap from the spike in infrastruc­ture outlays.

Indonesian cement supplier PT Indocement Tunggal Prakarsa soared as much as 54 per cent earlier this year as investors expect it to benefit from a surge in demand as the nation builds toll roads, ports and power plants.

Manila-based EEI Corp has surged 73 per cent, leading a rally in Philippine constructi­on stocks, as it begins work on the nation’s US$1.6 billion, 44km mass-railway project.

Infrastruc­ture developmen­t and more Chinese investment­s into the Philippine­s could support stocks with net asset value of the nation’s developers expanding by as much as 12 per cent over the next three years, writes Goldman Sachs Group Inc analysts including Paul Lian in a report dated December 7.

Companies providing services for constructi­on projects, such as

improving management efficiency or sustainabi­lity, might also capitalise on the spending boom on public works, said Felix Lam, a portfolio manager at BNP Paribas SA’s asset management arm.

Even so, the Southeast Asian market as a whole might continue to underperfo­rm, compared to “its larger, more liquid and faster growing North Asia and India counterpar­ts”, wrote Goldman Sachs Group Inc analysts including Timothy Moe in a report last month. And Credit Suisse Group AG has maintained its “underweigh­t” rating on the region for next year.

Still, Morgan Stanley sees investor attention back on the Asean region as markets are expected to give returns of as much as 10 per cent next year, more than three times what’s seen for emerging markets.

 ?? BLOOMBERG PIC ?? Constructi­on workers at a building site in Manila. President Rodrigo Duterte has earmarked US$180 billion for infrastruc­ture to keep driving one of the world’s best-performing economies over coming years.
BLOOMBERG PIC Constructi­on workers at a building site in Manila. President Rodrigo Duterte has earmarked US$180 billion for infrastruc­ture to keep driving one of the world’s best-performing economies over coming years.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia