Our hypothesis for a bull market in Emerging Markets equities – Expert Investment Views: Invesco Blog
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We believe that the decade ahead will be particularly good for emerging market (EM) equities. While this may come across as contrarian, it essentially rests on a handful of considerations:
Weakness in the dollar. The big structural moves in (non-China) EM equities are nearly always against the backdrop of weakness in the US dollar. And we see all the ingredients for significant US dollar weakness over the next few years, largely a reflection of considerable fiscal stress in the United States. We believe the federal debt stock will continue to expand at what can only be considered a highly unorthodox pace. The US federal debt is estimated to have surged from nearly $17 trillion in September 2019 to $20 trillion in June 2020.1 And the flow is even more dramatic. The US federal deficit crested $1 trillion in 2019 at peak cyclical employment levels.2 We expect the federal deficit to significantly worsen over the next 2-3 years, even after the pandemic subsides, as the highly contested November presidential elections lead the winning administration to address longstanding grievances associated with socioeconomic inequalities.
Figure 1: Emerging market equities and the US dollar have been negatively correlated
Performance of the US dollar vs. returns of emerging market equities over the past decade
The right cocktail. An environment where interest rates and energy prices are low, along with a pronounced trend against the US dollar, will likely create a situation where foreign capital flows and private investments will be directed towards non-US assets. That bodes well for emerging markets, which we think offer greater potential for growth as (non-China) developing countries by and large are constrained by insufficient domestic savings to fund investments necessary to lift structural growth. This starts the flywheel witnessed in previous periods of significant EM outperformance — foreign capital inflows beget credit creation, which in turn begets capital formation, growth, (formal sector) employment, productivity and significant earnings momentum. We see much of Latin America, Southeast Asia and parts of sub-Saharan Africa benefiting from this potential cocktail of a weak U.S. dollar, low global rates, sustainably lower energy prices and retreat from US dollar assets.
China. And then there is the other factor — the potential for a structural bull market in China. We have written previously about the outsized influence of China (45% of EM GDP, 41% of EM market capitalization3) and the fact that China’s economy could eventually dwarf all the other EM equities combined. This has already started to happen. China now accounts for more than 40% of the MSCI EM index, and we think it will continue to grow with the outstanding pipeline of Chinese unicorns going public in Hong Kong (and now also in the A-share markets). We believe China is the only significant macro growth story in a very dismal climate for worldwide growth. Having generated a plurality of worldwide growth over the past 10 years, China, we believe, will account for more than 50% of total worldwide growth over the next 2-3 years, in our view (and significantly all of global growth in 2020!). China’s GDP is rapidly closing the gap with the US, and it is now larger than the GDP of Africa, India, Russia, and all of Latin America combined. For the decade ahead, we expect China will remain the engine of global growth and only accelerate in terms of its increasing contribution to worldwide GDP despite likely lower, but higher-quality growth.
We also anticipate that the China-US relationship will remain structurally challenged while likely causing high-quality Chinese companies to consider mainland China and Hong Kong as their preferred exchanges for company listings. This is an important turn with wide-ranging consequences that we think will lead to improved quality of companies listed on the exchanges, better investment opportunities for domestic investors and will result in yet another flywheel effect that will boost the performance of Chinese equities. We expect this effect to be very significant as China has among the highest household savings globally, estimated at 23% of the country’s GDP (based on International Monetary Fund data as of 2018) and 15% higher than global average. In the past, public savings were invested in real assets like infrastructure while private saving went into real estate. Indeed, China’s enormous wealth creation is anomalous in its lack of diversity. This historically has been a result of the dysfunctional domestic equity market, populated almost entirely with state-owned companies. The highest quality Chinese equities were inaccessible to domestic investors, having been listed predominately overseas (US American Depository Receipts [ADRs] and more recently in Hong Kong).
Accessibility to these companies is changing rapidly. First, the Hong Kong Connect platform has opened a (south-bound) channel for domestic investors to invest in mainland companies listed in HK. Many of China’s finest companies have chosen to list in Hong Kong after changes to listing requirements, which permit dual-class shares (a staple of the ‘new economy’ governance globally). Meituan Dianping, Innovent Biologics, Wuxi Biologics among others have paved the way for even larger primary listings, including the rumored forthcoming $200 billion IPO of the Ant Group (the fintech arm of Alibaba).4 Second, growing US political pressure on Chinese ADR listings is encouraging a wave of parallel listings of companies like Alibaba and JD.com in Hong Kong, all of which become accessible for the first time to mainland investors through the HK Connect mechanism. Finally, the mainland exchanges are also evolving. In 2019, Shanghai’s tech-focused STAR Market (Shanghai Stock Exchange Science and Technology Innovation Board) was launched, modeled on New York’s Nasdaq. Meanwhile, the composition of the historic Shanghai and Shenzhen bourses has changed to reflect higher quality private sector listings, including such behemoths as Jiangsu Hengrui and Ping An Insurance. With these massive changes in accessibility (and relatively pedestrian real estate prices), we anticipate a tidal wave shift in asset allocation towards equities, analogous to what we witnessed in the United States in the 1980-90s when mutual funds democratized equity investing. And remember China has the largest savings pool in the world.
An observation. Markets have become enormously concentrated over the past 12 months. This is an anomaly we worry about. While much is bantered around the phenomenal rise of US tech giants’ capitalization and high valuations in pockets of emerging new tech companies, we see parallels in the EM landscape. There is a clutch of companies, which have heralded enormous attention and large amounts of investment dollars that we believe are structurally overvalued. These are often labeled with analogues (MercadoLibre, “the Amazon of Latin America”; Sea Group, “the Tencent of Southeast Asia”). While we are envious at having missed these early on, we would caution that lofty valuations and an uncertain path to profitably may result in losses as the long-term gravitational pull of fundamentals develops. Avoiding these, and other potential landmines requires an active manager that is focused on identifying high quality companies with strong competitive positions, balance sheets, cash flows and other factors that will allow them to thrive in the post-COVID-19 world.
We believe the challenging US and global circumstance make a very strong case for EM equities that offer a large investment opportunity set and several extraordinary companies with many real options that will manifest over time. The EM flywheel effect along with the positive developments around Chinese equities certainly bode well for the EM equity asset class, which we believe will be among the most attractive investment opportunities over the next decade.
As of June 30, 2020, Invesco Oppenheimer Developing Markets Fund had assets in the following companies: Meituan Dianping (1.01%), Innovent Biologics (0.85%), Wuxi Biologics (0.33%), Alibaba (5.09%), JD.com (0.00%), Jiangsu Hengrui (2.31%), MercadoLibre (0.00%), Amazon (0.00%), Tencent (7.81%), Sea Group (0.00%) and Ping An Insurance (2.94%).
As of June 30, 2020 Invesco Oppenheimer Emerging Markets Innovators Fund had assets in the following companies: Meituan Dianping (0.00%), Innovent Biologics (1.90%), Wuxi Biologics (1.30%), Alibaba (5.09%), JD.com (0.00%), Jiangsu Hengrui (2.31%), MercadoLibre (0.00%), Amazon (0.00%), Tencent (0.00%), Sea Group (0.00%) and Ping An Insurance (0.00%).
1 Source: Brookings “Policy 2020: How worried should you be about the federal deficit and debt?” 7/8/20.
2 Source: Brookings “Policy 2020: How worried should you be about the federal deficit and debt?” 7/8/20
3 Source: World Bank data, as of 7/31/20.
4 Source: Reuters, “Exclusive: Alibaba’s Ant plans Hong Kong IPO, targets valuation over $200 billion, sources say,” 7/8/20.
Important Information:
Image Credit: Song Heming/ Stocksy
Foreign investments may be volatile and involve additional expenses and special risks, including currency fluctuations, foreign taxes, regulatory and geopolitical risks. Investments in securities of growth companies may be volatile. Emerging and developing market investments may be especially volatile. Eurozone investments may be subject to volatility and liquidity issues. Investing significantly in a particular region, industry, sector or issuer may increase volatility and risk.
The opinions expressed are those of the author as of August 13, 2020, are based on current market conditions and are subject to change without notice. These opinions may differ from those of other Invesco investment professionals.
This does not constitute a recommendation of any investment strategy or product for a particular investor. Investors should consult a financial advisor/financial consultant before making any investment decisions. Invesco does not provide tax advice. The tax information contained herein is general and is not exhaustive by nature. Federal and state tax laws are complex and constantly changing. Investors should always consult their own legal or tax professional for information concerning their individual situation. The opinions expressed are those of the authors, are based on current market conditions and are subject to change without notice. These opinions may differ from those of other Invesco investment professionals.
Holdings are subject to change and are for illustrative purposes only and should not be construed as buy/sell recommendations.
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