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In
early 1997, Emerging Markets were hot - spreads were tight, most Asian
and Latin American economies looked robust, and investors could not get
enough of Argentine, Brazilian and Indonesian securities. There were
proclamations that we were entering a new era of economic sustainability
in which most developing economies had reached the take-off stage to
self-sustaining growth. Then came the ill-fated Thai baht devaluation in
July. The Asian contagion swept through Asian markets, spreading
through Eastern and Central Europe and into Latin America. The
International Monetary Fund was brought in to rescue South Korea,
Thailand and Indonesia and Russia eventually defaulted on its domestic
debt and made a disastrous devaluation. It took several years to
recover.
It
is now 2005. We are observing Emerging Markets bond spreads
trading at very expensive levels. Billions of dollars are pouring into
Emerging Market equities. Even Argentina is getting interest as the
country's debt crisis is finally being settled and investors look over
what is available to put money into (such as the ADR of Telecom
Argentina/TEO). There are also some proclaiming that this time the party
will continue - that there is a new level of sustainability. We don’t
think it is that simple.
Emerging
Markets are not likely to experience any major meltdown in 2005.
However, investors should be aware that while some countries have made
significant progress and might be in a long-term take-off mode that
implies sustainability of economic growth, a lot of other countries have
not. Much of the current round of euphoria surrounding Emerging
Market names comes from the commodities boom over the last two-three
years. Higher prices for oil, natural gas, copper, nickel, gold,
and bauxite have stimulated economic growth and converted current
account deficits into healthy surpluses in a wide range of countries.
Some
countries have actually made a concerted effort to reduce debt - as with
Russia. Others have made sweeping structural changes as in Turkey,
China, India and Ukraine. Still others, like Mexico, have consolidated
(at least for now) their position among the industrialized countries.
This overall positive trend is evident on the ratings front: in 2004
there were 30 upgrades and only 7 downgrades. The trend continued
into 2005, with Russia, Mexico and India getting upgrades. We expect to
see further ratings upgrades for Brazil, Chile, Indonesia, Panama (after
launching an ambitious fiscal reform), and possibly Ukraine.
Despite
the overall feel-good sentiment about Emerging Markets, our main concern
is that the main force behind upgrades and tight spreads is cyclical
factors. Countries like Brazil, the Philippines and Peru have high
levels of debt and still have considerable need for further structural
reforms.
The
fragile nature of EM economies was recently underscored by the
International Monetary Fund's Stabilization and Reform in Latin America,
released in February. The key points of the report were that weak
financial systems were a contributing factor to major economic crises in
Argentina, Ecuador and Uruguay, and without further reforms regional
financial systems remain vulnerable to contagion. In particular,
many Latin American governments need to enforce stricter accounting and
auditing standards, strengthen financial regulatory agencies and update
bankrupcty laws. The IMF also noted: "Debt burdens in many Latin
American countries are above prudent levels and must be brought
down."
Although
the IMF's comments were directed to Latin America, other EM countries
have similar problems. China's banking system remains a major challenge
for the athorities, the Philippines is highly indebted and struggling to
deal with a very messy fiscal situation, and many Middle Eastern and
African countries continue to have considerable hurdles to implementing
the right mix of economic reforms. In addition, there are political
challenges - structural reforms are often unpopular, some national
political elites continue to demonstrate a marked preference to loot
their countries wealth rather than spread it out, and non-formal
political actors (such as terrorists and insurgencies) threaten the
formal political system (as in Nepal, Sri Lanka and the Philippines). There
is still time to make changes, however, which will make an even better
investment story as a result.
At
some point, the Emerging Markets party will come to end, but probably
not in 2005. As long as international economic growth remains moderate,
interest rates go up at a measured pace and investors remain hungry for
yield, Emerging Markets are likely to enjoy further spread tightening
and ratings upgrades. Emerging markets equities will still attract
foreign investors. Commodity prices are not expected to fall radically
in 2005 and are expected to moderate downwards in 2006. Certainly a
crash in the Chinese economy, a massive dislocation in the dollar, or a
major geo-political crisis could bring the party to an abrupt end.
However, at this point, we see none of that. Consequently,
Emerging Markets look attractive in the short-term, but in the long-term
we will see a big difference between those countries that have stepped
up and made real structural changes and those that talk about it, but
have instead enjoyed the cyclical up-tick in the global economy without
thinking ahead to the next round. As always, selection of the
right securities is critical.

© 2005 Scott B. MacDonald,
Senior Consultant at KWR International, Inc.
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