Bangkok Post

Thailand is no longer a beach party for investors

- SHULI REN BLOOMBERG OPINION ©2018

Bangkok may be among the world’s top 10 tourism destinatio­ns, but for overseas investors it’s about as popular as a beach holiday in the Arctic.

Foreigners sold a net US$8.7 billion or so of Thai stocks this year, the most since data began in the late 1990s.

On the face of it, that’s something of a puzzle. Thailand has been something of a haven amid this year’s emerging markets sell-off. The baht, supported by an influx of overseas tourists, has dropped only 1.3% against the US dollar.

Meanwhile, the MSCI Thailand Index is showing a total return of minus 2.6%, outperform­ing the broader emergingma­rkets stock gauge by more than 10 percentage points.

In many ways, Thailand is Southeast Asia’s Japan — burdened with an ageing population and with a stock market that recaptured its 1994 high only this year. Only 38% of the Thai population is under the age of 30, compared with around 50% for

neighbours Indonesia and Vietnam.

While regional super-apps such as ridehailin­g service Grab and Internet hospitalit­y chain OYO are ploughing hundreds of millions of dollars into Indonesia, Thailand is only an afterthoug­ht for them. The economy grew 3.3% in the third quarter from a year earlier, data showed on Monday, the weakest pace since 2016 and missing all estimates in a Bloomberg survey.

Foreigners increasing­ly see Thailand

as little more than a giant beach resort, choosing to invest instead in Vietnam’s manufactur­ing prowess and Indonesia’s underbanke­d youth.

Tourism revenue accounts for almost 12% of Thailand’s GDP, by far the highest ratio in Southeast Asia. By contrast, the country’s inbound foreign direct investment could politely be described as paltry.

And there are those two lost decades for stock investors. By comparison with

Thailand, equity benchmarks in Indonesia and the Philippine­s have set fresh records every few years.

Thailand’s stock market has been resilient this year in part thanks to strong buying from local mutual funds. But what if these pools start to invest abroad instead? Foreigners buying into Thailand now could find themselves facing another long wait for gains. The country has a history of political turmoil and natural disasters that should

give investors pause. Since 2004, Thailand has undergone a devastatin­g tsunami, two military coups d’etat, violent street protests, destructiv­e floods and the bombing of a shrine in Bangkok — among other disruptive events. A fresh bout of turbulence may not be far away. The outcome of a general election scheduled for February looks increasing­ly uncertain.

The popularity of the new pro-military Palang Pracharath Party declined to 20.6% in September, from 25.1% in May, while the leading Pheu Thai Party, the third incarnatio­n of a movement founded by ousted former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, has 28.8% support.

A worst-case scenario would see a closely contested election followed by a backlash and protests, as witnessed in 2006, Goldman Sachs Group Inc warned in its 2019 Asia Economics outlook.

Thailand’s famed beach resorts are fun for a short stay. Investors seeking a longerterm home for their money should probably find somewhere more stable. Shuli Ren is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering Asian markets. She previously wrote on markets for Barron’s, following a career as an investment banker, and is a CFA charterhol­der.

 ?? SOMCHAI POOMLARD ?? Tourists relax on a beach in Phuket. Thailand is a haven for holiday makers, but not foreign investors.
SOMCHAI POOMLARD Tourists relax on a beach in Phuket. Thailand is a haven for holiday makers, but not foreign investors.

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