Manila Bulletin

Investors are fleeing once-popular emerging markets in droves

- By BERNARD CONDON and MATTHEW CRAFT

NEW YORK (AP) – If you think investors in US stocks have had it rough, consider the hapless folks who followed Wall Street's advice to buy emerging market stocks.

The MSCI Emerging Market index has lost 25 percent over the past year, while the mostly widely held US fund, the Vanguard Total Stock Market index, is down less than 1 percent.

After the financial crisis, plowing money into emerging markets seemed like a sure bet. China was gobbling up raw materials from Brazil, Indonesia and Russia, and their stock markets were soaring. Wall Street cranked up its marketing machine, creating 246 funds to ride the boom.

“Whatever is hot, Wall Street will race out with new products to catch the investor's eye,'' says Larry Swedroe, head of research at Buckingham Asset Management. The blitz worked. In the five years through 2013, investors poured $104 billion into emerging-market stock funds, more than quadruple the amount of money in these funds.

Now, in classic fashion, investors are reversing course: They've yanked $40 billion from emerging-market stocks this year, a record pace of withdrawal­s, as a slowdown in China has hammered companies that supply raw materials. But the selling has also created real value, some savvy investors say. It costs half as much to buy a dollar of earnings from emerging market companies now than it does to buy a dollar of earnings from US companies.

The zigzagging fortunes of emerging markets reveal the pitfalls of chasing the hot new thing, and how the best time to buy may be precisely when everyone else is selling. EMERGING STOCK FUNDS Betting on emerging markets has never been for the faint of heart. Values soar as money floods in from investors hoping to profit from rapid economic growth. Along comes a crisis, currencies collapse and inflation spikes. Values plummet and money rushes out.

Why they're falling now: Fear that Chinese demand for Brazilian steel, Indonesian coal, Chilean copper and other goods could slow further. Sliding currencies in these countries squeeze companies trying to pay back loans taken out in dollars. Memories of the 1997 Asian financial crisis aren't helping. Back then, investors fled Thailand, Indonesia and other Asian tigers, and the fallout threatened to spark a global recession.

Why investors may be wrong: Companies in developing countries have taken out more loans in their own currencies, so they're better prepared when their currencies fall against the dollar. Manufactur­ers in South Korea and Taiwan, for example, import a lot of raw materials, so they benefit from falling commodity prices. And many big Indian companies rely on local customers, providing banking services and consumer goods to the country's swelling middle class.

The value case: It will cost you $13.23 to buy a dollar of their average annual earnings over the past decade, less than the $14 it cost during the panic selling of the 2008 financial crisis, according to Chris Brightman, chief investment officer at Research Affiliates. Before that crisis, investors paid $35 for a dollar of earnings, nearly triple the price now.

The problem is, prices could get cheaper still. Brightman warns that investors tend to overshoot during busts, just as they do during booms, because they think “what is happening currently will go on forever.''

COMMODITY FUNDS The drops are stunning. Oil falling by more than half in the past year, iron ore plunging by a third, coal and copper off by more than a quarter. Even prices for wheat and corn – people can't stop eating, can they? – have fallen by more than half in two years.

Pimco's largest raw materials fund, the Commodity Real Return Strategy fund, has lost a third of its value over the past year. That's after a rocky ten years, during which the fund rocketed as high as 30 percent and plunged as much as 60 percent.

Why they're falling now: Too many companies pulled too much out of the ground before the financial crisis. China's massive stimulus program fueled even more drilling and digging. With the big investment­s already made, companies figure they might as well keep pumping oil and extracting ore. Investors speculate that supply may overwhelm demand for a long time yet.

Why investors may be wrong: Small drillers and miners are starting to go out of business as prices fall below their cost of production. That should ultimately squeeze supply, and lead to prices stabilizin­g.

The value case: The commodity glut is hardly a secret, so prices may already reflect it. Market strategist­s at Northern Trust wrote in a recent report that prices are looking more compelling, and recommende­d that investors consider the Morningsta­r Global Upstream Natural Resources fund, which contains 120 commodity producers. They like the fund's exposure to food giants such as Bunge and Archers Daniels Midland. It's not for the timid, though. The fund is in the middle of a three-year losing streak, capped by a 19 percent drop in the last three months.

In fact, these investment­s may need five to 10 years before they become truly attractive, says Rudolph-Riad Younes, a portfolio manager at R Squared Capital Management. Buying now is “a loser's game.''

EMERGING MARKET BONDS

Enticed by higher interest rates than in the US, investors plowed into emerging market bond funds in the aftermath of the 2008 crisis. Warnings that the US government would struggle to pay its rising debts added to their appeal. Government­s in Brazil, Turkey and other developing countries had scaled back their borrowing, and with their economies expanding rapidly, it seemed they would have no trouble making their payments. In the four years after 2008, the amount of money these bond funds had at their disposal tripled to $77 billion.

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