Although the report below states that "hopes that emerging markets could
power ahead regardless – a theory known as decoupling – now look misguided",
the evidence it presents suggests otherwise:

1. Demand for commodities is still strong in China and other rapidly
industrializing nations outside the core OECD countries; 2. The BRIC's, in
particular, have abundant foreign exchange reserves; 3. their banks have
limited exposure to the bad debt plaguing their American and European
counterparts, and  4. a steadily growing percentage of their foreign trade
is with each other, easing their dependence on the advanced capitalist
countries. While some smaller, heavily-indebted and highly export-dependent
countries could be pulled under by the financial crisis and economic
downturn in the West, indications are that China and the other big new
economies should stay afloat and help stave off a global depression.

According to one analyst, “...the period between 2005 and 2015 (will be) a
remarkable decade – remarkable because of the transfer of wealth from
developed world to developing world. In the next few years, you will
continue to see the economic power shift east.”

-MG


Time to pay the bill?
By David Oakley and Rachel Morarjee
Financial Times
August 28 2008


In the bars of downtown Moscow, there is still a buzz as if all is well in
the world. At the Ritz-Carlton Hotel’s glass-domed rooftop lounge, which
looks out on to Red Square, dark-suited oligarchs enjoy $50 cocktails,
seemingly unperturbed by the deterioration in international relations that
has followed the Kremlin’s military intervention in Georgia – even though it
has made foreign investors take flight.

“We’ve been very busy in the last few days. Even wealthy Georgians who live
in Moscow come here,” says Sergei Logvinov, a hotel official.

With Russian equities down by 15 per cent for their biggest monthly fall in
almost eight years, foreign exchange reserves have dropped by $16bn (£8.7bn,
€10.9bn), a slide not seen since Russia’s economic crisis of 1998. Yet
Russia is by no means the only emerging market where confidence is on the
wane. Not only has political risk also escalated in countries such as
Pakistan but, across the industrialising world, inflation is dogging growth
and the recent rise in commodity prices is faltering.

Sceptics wonder whether the party is coming to an end for these developing
economies, after a five-year bull run.

In spite of the credit crisis, the MSCI emerging market index rose by nearly
40 per cent in 2007, prompting many investors to suggest that the developing
world was insulated against the problems in the west. But these hopes that
emerging markets could power ahead regardless – a theory known as
decoupling – now look misguided. Since the turn of the year, emerging stocks
have tumbled, most notably in China, where the Shanghai Composite index has
fallen 52 per cent. Russia’s stock market has fallen by 27 per cent since
January, India’s by 37 per cent and Brazil’s by 5 per cent.

As investors rushed for the exits in nearly every market, it seemed that the
financial ills of the west were infecting these locations. Many analysts
fear the US and European economies will continue to deteriorate, putting
even greater strains on growth in the emerging world.

So what are the remaining dangers and, as some investors and analysts are
starting to argue, are economic fundamentals strong enough that the torrid
experience of the past few months has left valuations looking attractive
once more?

Certainly, fears about a slowdown in the west co-exist with worries that the
largest emerging economies are overheating. Inflation is rising across the
emerging world. China’s average inflation rate for 2009 is forecast to
accelerate to 6.8 per cent from 4.8 per cent this year, Brazil’s to 5.3 per
cent from 3.6 per cent, India’s to 8.4 per cent from 6.4 per cent and Russia’s
from 9 per cent to 14.6 per cent, according to economists at HSBC.

These rises are being fuelled not only by commodity prices that are still
near historical highs but also by limits to industrial capacity. Philip
Poole, global head of emerging markets research at HSBC, says: “There has
not been enough investment to sustain growth, so we are seeing many
economies running into capacity constraints, adding to production costs.
This is putting pressure on inflation.” Of the so-called Bric nations –
Brazil, Russia, India and China – only China has plenty of spare capacity,
he adds.

On commodities, a further weakening in prices would undermine the revenue
streams of resource producing countries such as Brazil and Russia.

Indeed, the commodity factor also raises the question of how useful the
phrase “emerging market” really is. It covers more than 150 economies as
different as Indonesia and Chile, some of which are rich in resources while
others are not. This partly explains why equity markets in commodity
producing countries have fared better this year than countries that must
import resources, such as India. Even if inflation were stoking up their
economies, the theory was that they were benefiting from oil and food
prices, which remain high in historical terms.

However, analysts insist the outlook for many of these countries has also
been helped by other factors. One is that the health of their public
finances, the extent of their exposure to foreign debt and the respective
monetary and fiscal management of their economies have all improved beyond
recognition since the wave of emerging markets crises in the 1990s.

In these terms, the Brics read well. Banks in the big four emerging
countries have not borrowed heavily overseas, curbing their exposure to the
credit problems in the west. Foreign debt held by Chinese banks as a
percentage of gross domestic product is only 2 per cent, for India 4 per
cent and for Brazil and Russia 13 per cent, according to Deutsche Bank.
These countries have also all been fairly quick to raise interest rates to
tackle the inflationary threat.

China’s foreign exchange reserves, excluding gold, are forecast to stand at
$1,900bn this year, India’s $330bn and Brazil’s $205bn, HSBC’s projections
show. Even Russia, in spite of the conflict in Georgia, is forecast to have
reserves in excess of $500bn by year-end. As some analysts put it, the
countries all have money in the bank should things grow even more ugly in
the financial markets and global economic climate.

On top of this, Brazil and Russia have assets in the ground. Russia, for
example, produces more than $1bn a day from its vast oil reserves, while
Brazil is a big producer of corn, wheat, sugar and oil. Many Latin American
and African nations are also rich in resources and showing signs of improved
political and economic stability, while the Middle East is awash with oil.

Commodities provoke the sharpest divisions of opinion. Already down more
than 20 per cent, should commodity indices suffer further significant falls,
it would take the steam out of inflation but at the same time hit exporters’
coffers. However, analysts note that even an oil price of $100 a barrel
would provide substantial sums for countries such as Russia.

Another plus for the Brics is also a central plank of the “decoupling”
thesis – that they have a diminishing reliance on the developed markets as a
destination for their exports. They export more to other emerging markets
than ever before, while their economies are increasingly boosted by domestic
demand rather than by the vagaries of the US or European consumer. They are
also spending heavily on infrastructure.

In Russia’s case, barely 5 per cent of its exports go to the US, although
Brazil at 14 per cent, India at 15 per cent and China at nearly 20 per cent
would be more affected if US growth, after its strong second quarter
performance, turns weaker again. The strengthening of the dollar will also
help these and other emerging economies, particularly those in the Middle
East and Asia that have currencies pegged to the US unit and have suffered
extra inflationary strain because of its weakness.

Yet some of the other developing nations will come under pressure as
financial conditions worsen and inflation rises. Kazakh­stan, with foreign
debt equivalent to 71.4 per cent of GDP, is one example of a country that
enjoyed the good times perhaps a little too much, borrowing heavily to fund
expansion in its property sector. Mexico is highly exposed to the US
economy, relying on it for 85 per cent of its exports, while many of the
central and eastern European economies depend on the eurozone for export
earnings as well as running large current account deficits.

In short, the outlook is varied for the differing emerging nations,
depending on political and domestic economic factors. The next few months
will be rocky for foreign investors in Russia and eastern Europe. “In a
nutshell, this is a short-term problem for Russian markets. Fundamentally,
nothing has changed in Russia,” says Vladimir Savov, Russia strategist at
Credit Suisse.

But for most emerging markets, the long-term prospects are arguably rather
brighter than the recent turbulence might suggest. There are reasons to hope
that they can continue to outperform their western rivals in terms of
growth – and benefit from wealth transfers from the advanced to developing
nations. Nigel Rendell from RBC Capital Markets says: “In terms of years
rather than months, the emerging market economies are looking in good shape.
They are likely to continue growing strongly, more strongly than the western
economies – [particularly] the US and the eurozone.”

Since 2000, emerging nations have contributed an increasing amount to the
world’s output. The International Monetary Fund estimates that these
economies will provide more than 80 per cent of global growth this year – up
from less than 50 per cent at the turn of the millennium – as they now make
up $18,100bn of world GDP, a 30 per cent share. The IMF forecasts that this
proportion will grow to 35 per cent, or $28,850bn, by 2013.

What of their stock markets? During last year’s burst of optimism over
emerging equities, these commanded a higher multiple of earnings than
developed market stocks, according to MSCI indices. This has now reversed
and emerging markets trade at a substantial discount to the developed world
once more. That could encourage bargain-hunters who believe in their
long-term growth prospects.

But overall, if the four Brics are anything to go by and if growth is the
right benchmark to measure the health of an economy, analysts generally
expect them to weather the present difficulties.

Consensus forecasts indicate that China’s GDP growth is expected to slow to
9.2 per cent next year from a peak of 11.9 per cent in 2007, Brazil’s to 3.8
per cent from a high of 5.4 per cent in 2007, Russia’s to 7 per cent next
year from its 2007 peak of 8.1 per cent, India’s to 7.7 per cent from 9 per
cent last year.

These growth levels are still relatively strong and will certainly
outperform the west, suggesting a soft rather than a hard landing and a
bright long-term outlook.

“By 2015, today’s current emerging markets will be a much larger part of the
world economy,” says Dalinc Ariburnu, head of emerging markets at Deutsche
Bank.

“I am sure that when we look back in years to come, we will say the period
between 2005 and 2015 was a remarkable decade – remarkable because of the
transfer of wealth from developed world to developing world,” he adds. “In
the next few years, you will continue to see the economic power shift east.”

_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to