*Barings narrows portfolio focus to Southeast Asia*
By *Rita Raagas De
Ramos*<http://www.asianinvestor.net/team.aspx?PID=135419&CIID=119277>
|  12 August 2008
*
Baring Asset Management has converted a Pacific Fund launched in 1978 into a
portfolio that invests mainly in the core Asean markets of Singapore,
Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines.*
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Baring Asset Management has converted its Pacific Fund to a portfolio that
focuses on Southeast Asian markets.

The Baring Asean Frontiers Fund will invest mainly in Southeast Asia, but
will also have a small exposure to Greater China. The fund is the result of
demand from Baring's clients for exposure to the opportunities available in
the smaller and faster-growing markets in Asia.

"More than a decade on from the Asian financial crisis of 1997, we believe
Asia's tigers are ready to pounce again," says SooHai Lim, the Hong
Kong-based manager of the Baring Asean Frontiers Fund. "Government and
corporate balance sheets have restructured, current account deficits have
turned into surpluses, fiscal deficits have been reined in, and local
currencies are on the rise."

Lim isn't just talking theory when recalling the history of financial
markets in Southeast Asia and comparing that to developments over the past
decade. He has been investing in select Asean markets for more than a decade
and had exposure to Thai equities at the height of the 1997 crisis triggered
by the devaluation of the Thai baht.

Baring Asset Management believes the markets with the greatest growth
potential include Singapore, Malaysia, and the Philippines. "We think this
is an exciting block of countries to look at," says Lim.

With a total population base of over 550 million, and a combination of rich
natural resources and world-class business expertise, the fund house expects
the major Asean economies to deliver stronger growth in the medium- to
long-term.

Most investors have focused on "the remarkable changes taking place in
China", says Lim, neglecting other markets in Asia. (In February, Baring
Asset Management launched the Baring China Growth Fund and the Baring China
Select Fund, which invest in companies that stand to benefit from the
economic growth and development of China.)

Singapore, for example, is arguably the most developed market in Asia
ex-Japan and has repositioned itself as an alternative private banking
centre for wealthy Asians and investors from the Middle East and Europe, Lim
says.

Lim likes Singapore because valuations are attractive and, with inflation on
the rise, there are risks that policy errors might take place in other
markets in the hands of less experienced policymakers.

"Singapore has had a good track record of policy execution, so we are
comfortable that they will actually be able to take the right measures to
handle this," he says.

Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand, meanwhile, are major suppliers of
commodities to their neighbours in Asia.

"We like Indonesia on a longer-term basis because it has the population base
to be a sizeable consumer market," Lim says. "It is also a huge commodities
exporter. It exports a lot of coal, exports a lot of palm oil and therefore
is an indirect beneficiary of the rise of China and India."

Other markets have their own appeal. The Philippines' "most successful
export" is its well-educated English speaking population found all around
the world, Lim says, and this is underwriting an economic boom back home
through the remittance of their hard-earned savings.

Around 80% of the Baring Asean Frontiers Fund will be invested in the "core"
Asean markets of Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand and the
Philippines. Around 10% will be invested in the up-and-coming frontier
markets such as Vietnam and the non-Asean markets of India and Sri Lanka.
The balance will have exposure to the non-Asean market of Greater China.

"The fund's exposure to Greater China and the frontier economies allows
investors to benefit from the changes taking place there," Lim says.
"Vietnam, for example, is emerging as an attractive, low-cost alternative to
China for companies looking to diversify their manufacturing. With growth
forecasts looking favourable, we believe Vietnam's nascent equity market
could well follow China's meteoric rise."

The Irish-domiciled fund will employ an actively managed strategy using a
growth-at-a-reasonable-price investment philosophy, but will be benchmarked
against the MSCI Southeast Asia Index. The portfolio is expected to have
around 40 to 50 stocks.

The portfolio's predecessor, the Baring Pacific Fund, was launched in 1978.
Most recently, it was managed by Henry Chan, head of Asian equities at
Baring Asset Management. It invested in the Pacific and Pacific Rim region
including Australia, Chile, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Malaysia,
Mexico, New Zealand, Singapore and Thailand.








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