Under the 'Emerging' Curtain
<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124846985120879989.html> By JASON ZWEIG
Behind the world's hottest markets is a cold truth many investors don't want
to hear.

Emerging markets -- those developing countries that used to be called "The
Third World," like Chile and China, Turkey and Thailand, Brazil and India --
have been hotter than a potful of habanero peppers. The MSCI Emerging
Markets index has gained 45% so far this year, versus 9% for the U.S.

And investors have noticed, pouring $10.6 billion into emerging-markets
mutual funds so far this year, or more than 34 times the total they added to
U.S. stock funds. The iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Index
Fund<http://mail.google.com/public/quotes/main.html?type=djn&symbol=eem>is
now the fourth-biggest of all exchange-traded funds, with $30.8
billion
in assets.

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[image: Intelligent Investor]
Heath Hinegardner
 [image: Intelligent Investor]
[image: Intelligent Investor]

Investors hope to capture the stunningly high growth of the developing
world, especially with the U.S. economy shriveling. In the second quarter of
2009, China's economy officially grew 7.9%, while the U.S. likely contracted
about 1.5% in the same period. For all of 2009, Barclays Capital forecasts,
the developing economies of Asia will grow 5.2%, while U.S. gross domestic
product will shrink by 2.3%.

Unfortunately, high economic growth doesn't ensure high stock returns.
"People have hopelessly got the wrong end of the story," warns Elroy Dimson
of London Business School, who is one of the world's leading authorities on
financial markets.

Based on decades of data from 53 countries, Prof. Dimson has found that the
economies with the highest growth produce the lowest stock returns -- by an
immense margin. Stocks in countries with the highest economic growth have
earned an annual average return of 6%; those in the slowest-growing nations
have gained an average of 12% annually.

That isn't a typo. Over the long run, stocks in the world's hottest
economies have performed half as well as those in the coldest. When Prof.
Dimson presented these findings recently in a guest lecture at a Yale
University finance program, "a couple of people just about fell off their
chairs," he says. "They couldn't believe it."

But, if you think about this puzzle for a few moments, it's no longer very
puzzling. In stock markets, as elsewhere in life, value depends on both
quality and price. When you buy into emerging markets, you get better
economic growth -- but, at least for now, you don't get in at a better
price.

"It's not that China is growing and everybody else thinks it's shrinking,"
Prof. Dimson says. "You're paying a price that reflects the growth that
everybody can see."

In other words, economic growth is high, but stock valuations are even
higher. In 2008, as U.S. stocks fell 37.6%, emerging markets crashed 53.3%,
according to MSCI. At year end, emerging-markets stocks traded at a 38%
discount to U.S. shares, as measured by the ratio of price to earnings. Now
that both markets have bounced back, emerging markets are at only a 21%
discount. And make no mistake: They should be much cheaper than U.S. stocks,
because they are far riskier.

"The logical fallacy is the same one investors fell into with Internet
stocks a decade ago," says finance professor Jay Ritter of the University of
Florida. "Rapid technological change doesn't necessarily mean that the
owners of capital will get the benefits. Neither does rapid economic
growth."

High growth draws out new companies that absorb capital, bid up the cost of
labor and drive down the prices of goods and services. That is good news for
local workers and global consumers, but it is ultimately bad news for
investors. Last year, at least six of the world's 10 largest initial public
offerings of stock were in emerging markets. Through June 30, Asia, Latin
America, the Mideast and Africa have accounted for 69% of the dollar value
of all IPOs world-wide. Growth in those economies will now be spread more
thinly across dozens of more companies owned by multitudes of new investors.

The role of emerging markets, says Prof. Dimson, "is to provide
diversification, not to add to returns." Having up to 15% of your total U.S.
and international stock assets in emerging markets can make sense. But
before you jump in with both feet, look at the holdings of the international
funds you already own; many keep at least 20% of their assets in developing
markets.

Like all performance chasing, this latest investing binge is doomed to
disappoint the people who don't understand what they are doing.

-- 
Best Regards,
Jay Shah, FRM

"Expect The Unexpected"

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