The National - News

Emerging market indexes need to adapt to new world fundamenta­ls

- OLIVER SCHUTZMANN

The inclusion of the UAE, Qatar and – expected soon – Saudi Arabia in the FTSE Russell and MSCI Emerging Market indices is expected to bring many benefits.

Institutio­nal funds that track the index will include GCC stocks in their portfolios, adding liquidity, new investors and a truly internatio­nal investor base. These new investors bring higher standards to the region, greater transparen­cy and demand for world-class disclosure levels.

Regional companies will benefit from greater internatio­nal interest, while regional investors will benefit from rising standards, and the GCC would gain the recognitio­n it deserves for its strongest companies.

But now a new mood is being seen in the investment community. Informed market participan­ts are questionin­g the logic and make-up of emerging market indices.

The Financial Times recently called the MSCI Emerging Markets Index “a triumph of marketing over judgement”. The 24 countries that make up the index hide vast discrepanc­ies: large countries (Brazil, China, Russia) are bundled with small (Chile, Hungary, Qatar). Commodity exporters (UAE, Malaysia) sit alongside commodity importers (South Korea, Taiwan). And it is not only macroecono­mics that are being questioned. The risk factors in these countries are widely different.

For Mexico, the greatest risk is its future relations with the United States. For South Korea, its neighbour to the north provides the greatest risk. How are these correlated? And should they be? These questions must also be set against the current debate over the merits of active versus passive investment.

After years of rebalancin­g away from active managers towards index benchmarks and tracker funds, in today’s low-yield world, the attraction­s of active fund managers are returning to favour. These and other factors are informing the debate around the future of emerging market indices, to the extent that voices in the investment world are seriously questionin­g whether they should even exist.

The world is so different from the 1980s when emerging market indices first appeared, that they no longer reflect reality, nor do they serve the interests of investors.

So where does this leave the GCC? And if the days of the emerging market index are numbered, what should companies do to protect themselves from any outflow of capital?

Fortunatel­y, this would not be a sudden change. There is US$1.6 trillion following the MSCI index, and that will take time to unwind. Furthermor­e, the reasons for the creation of the indices remain true: fast growing countries with young population­s, well-managed capital markets and stable systems of government are a good bet for sustainabl­e future growth.

But change will come, and far-sighted GCC companies can take steps to position themselves for a new era. Benchmark indices will not disappear – but they are expected to change.

So what will the new measures and standards for inclusion be? In other words, what is the investor of the future going to look for? Many factors will drive the future of investing, including technology (artificial intelligen­ce, the internet of things, fintech); global trade (commoditie­s cycle; China’s return to growth, slowing developed markets); and climate change. These global themes are likely to be more of a driving force for investment allocation than emerging or frontier market status.

One term that will be heard more and more is “environmen­tal, social and governance (ESG)” benchmarks. This is the classifica­tion of companies judged by their environmen­tal activities, corporate governance, social impact and other factors that measure a company’s record in these “softer” areas, rather than purely its financial performanc­e.

GCC companies can be sure that ESG will be a growing factor in investor decisions, and they can take immediate steps to focus on these factors in their operations. Whatever the future holds, one trend is rapidly becoming apparent: the term “emerging market” is no longer adequate to determine allocation strategies for sophistica­ted investors. Regional firms would be wise not to rely on it.

Oliver Schutzmann is founder and chief executive of Iridium Investor Relations, an advisory and technology firm

Informed market participan­ts are questionin­g the logic and make-up of EM indice

 ?? Delores Johnson / The National ?? Abu Dhabi Stock Exchange. The inclusion of UAE indices on the MSCI index helps raise standards
Delores Johnson / The National Abu Dhabi Stock Exchange. The inclusion of UAE indices on the MSCI index helps raise standards

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