The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Bad loan build-up clouds emerging share market picture

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LONDON: Emerging equities markets have soared this year as investor sentiment toward them rebounds, but for some the enthusiasm is being tempered by worries about surging bad loans at many banks.

Non-performing loans have shot up to a global high of close to 10 per cent of gross credit exposures in India, and they are expected to edge up this year in China, Mexico, Indonesia, Russia, Turkey and Argentina, say analysts.

A gloomy outlook on the final two issued by Standard & Poor’s undercuts the assumption that fallout from currency crises last year in both countries was already priced in.

As well as holding back financial sector growth and national economies, hefty levels of soured debt pose a particular risk for foreign investors, who have long favored retail lenders as picks for getting exposure to rising middle classes in emerging markets.

EM bank lending swelled to an average of 128 per cent of GDP among the BRICS -- Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa -in 2017, from 98 per cent in 2007, according to World Bank data.

But such activity is vulnerable to swings in the credit cycle, and some fund managers are growing more cautious.

Asset manager Ashmore Group is negative on banks in seven emerging countries - China, Malaysia, South Korea, Taiwan, Turkey, Mexico and Russia - and positive on just Indonesia, India and Peru, said emerging markets equity portfolio manager Edward Evans.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? A broker reacts while trading at his computer terminal at a stock brokerage firm in Mumbai, India, December 11, 2018.
— Reuters photo A broker reacts while trading at his computer terminal at a stock brokerage firm in Mumbai, India, December 11, 2018.

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