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The best contrarian investment opportunit­ies this autumn

- PETER COOPER Peter Cooper has been writing about finance in the Gulf for over 20 years

In theory being a contrarian investor is simple enough. You look to buy valuable assets when they are temporaril­y out of favour for some temporary reason and get them cheap. Then you wait until everybody else has decided to do the same thing and sell.

True, this approach to investing is not for the faint hearted or those with a very short-term view, and you need to be particular­ly careful if it involves any borrowed money because it often takes a bit longer than you expect. But it does work.

Buying cheap and selling expensive always does, if you can get it right.

Pessimists say at the moment global stock markets are hugely overvalued and ready for a crash, and they are probably right. Likewise, US interest rates are shifting up and that puts the massive global bond markets in peril as well as real estate where debt is a main market driver.

However, contrarian­s always look for the other side of the coin. Something is always being overlooked or just in a different phase of the market cycle between being cheap and overvalued.

So where are the contrarian­s looking today?

As a UAE-based investor I am far more optimistic about local prospects than many other analysts. I’ve noticed in the past that oil prices drive the local economy, as a business hub for the Middle East oil producers and for Abu Dhabi as a major producer.

Last week, Brent crude was almost US$60, more than double where it was two years ago. At the same time, and the two are somewhat linked, the US dollar has depreciate­d significan­tly over the past year.

That’s a double bonus for the UAE: a higher cash flow and local business revenues along with cheaper currency for the tourism and aviation sectors.

Because the UAE has about 80 per cent expatriate­s, this has a particular­ly powerful leveraged effect on demand in other sectors like real estate. As business expands, it employs more people and they have to live somewhere.

We saw this most dramatical­ly in the recovery from the 2008 to 2011 recession. The turnaround, when it came, quickly filled up swathes of new property and developers soon could not keep up with the demand again.

Now the business slowdown of the past few years has not been anything as dramatic as the 2008 boom-to-bust, so the recovery should be even quicker and stronger.

So is it a good time to buy a villa or an apartment in Dubai? Yes, this would appear to be the bottom of a classic threeyear property cycle. Of course you will always have Cassandras telling you about 35 per cent vacancy rates in some communitie­s and predicting worse to come.

But that only reflects the past bad business period and not necessaril­y the future outlook. The opportunit­y is that you have plenty of choice at cheap prices and you won’t have that when the market has recovered, and it always does.

If you don’t want the commitment of owning a property then buying the major property stocks is a good proxy, with Emaar the obvious standout stock pick with low debt and best in class management.

Elsewhere, contrarian­s are struggling to find opportunit­ies because a long period of low interest rates have forced asset valuations to record heights. But this is not always the case.

US stocks selling on a Cape-Shiller adjusted priceto-earnings ratio of 31 are awesomely expensive, trading at levels only ever seen just before the crashes of 1929 and 2000.

Then again consider Russia, only rated at just under seven. Professor Robert Shiller, who co-created this index, says he is thinking about buying Russia at these levels, although notes that this market could still go a bit lower. The rouble is also very low.

Russia is after all a major energy producer and stands to gain from the same upswing I’ve just forecast for the UAE. I was surprised recently to find that Europe’s tallest three buildings are not in London but Moscow following recent skyscraper completion­s.

Jim Rogers, the multi-millionair­e contrarian investor who spotted the commoditie­s boom of the 2000s before anybody else, is a big bull on Russia.

Nearby Central Europe is also still a great place to invest if you can find the right vehicle. Countries like Poland, Romania, Hungary and the Czech Republic are all pursuing lowtax, business-friendly policies that are attracting increasing foreign investment and have double the average EU GDP growth.

Assets like property in Central Europe are well below prices in the “more advanced” economies of Western Europe. Plus if you are a dollar or dirham investor then the euro also has more upside as the pendulum continues to swing as I correctly predicted in this column a year ago.

Finally, I must add gold to this list of contrarian plays. Ray Dalio, one of the most successful hedge fund managers of all time, is currently recommendi­ng that every investor should have 5 to 10 per cent of their assets in gold.

Gold has performed very well this year but prices still languish below recent highs of 2011. Mr Dalio thinks global political risk alone is sufficient reason to own gold. Think North Korea, Iran, Syria, Ukraine.

Mr Dalio was one of the few hedge fund managers to accurately predict the last global financial crisis; he made his best-ever bets then and currently has a personal net worth of about $17 billion.

If every investor was to take his advice and make this asset allocation, then it would be a self-fulfilling prophecy as the supply of gold is relatively fixed so the price would take a big jump.

Not every contrarian prediction is a winner. But over the years this has played out well for me, even if patience has also been required because it always seems to take much longer than you expect.

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