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Emerging markets “in the sweet spot” for strong returns, says Mobius

02 July 2014

Mark Mobius, manager of the Templeton Emerging Markets investment trust, reviews the year so far for the asset class, and questions why some long-term investors are so wary of recent difficulties in countries such as China and Brazil.

By Mark Mobius,

Franklin Templeton

As I’ve often said, investing in emerging markets requires patience, long-term perspective, and selective stock-picking. I think many investors focus too much on the short-term.

ALT_TAG As long-term investors, we view short-term bouts of volatility as an opportune time to find potential bargains for our portfolios, and we certainly experienced that in the first half of the year.

Sentiment in emerging markets seemed to be at a particularly low point at the very start of the year, coming off a weak 2013.

As the US Federal Reserve (Fed) started tapering its quantitative easing program, fears seem to have surfaced that liquidity would dry up, and concerns about potentially slower growth in China this year gave some investors pause.

Headlines of conflict and violence in countries including Ukraine, Turkey, Thailand and Nigeria also affected overall investor sentiment in the first half of the year, along with doubts about the readiness of Russia to host the Winter Olympics and Brazil to host the FIFA World Cup.

On the brighter side, India’s market saw a post-election resurgence of hope, China’s economy did not experience a hard landing and the upgrade of Qatar and United Arab Emirates to emerging markets status from frontier appeared to fuel investor interest.

Performance of indices since Jan 2013


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Source: FE Analytics

We believe emerging markets overall are now in what could be classified as a “recovery phase” after 2013’s underperformance, barring no further unexpected shocks.

It’s important to look at the big picture as an investor in emerging markets.

During the last 10 years, there have been only three years when emerging markets underperformed developed markets, 2013 being one of them.


Performance of indices since Jan 2004

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Source: FE Analytics

In the first half of 2014, emerging markets have generally outperformed developed markets, and I would say that we’re in a sweet spot in terms of emerging markets’ recovery. And, we think a number of frontier markets, the even lesser-developed subset of emerging markets, look particularly attractive right now.

Short-term volatility is likely something we will continue to deal with for the rest of 2014 and beyond. In some cases, unfortunately, the reaction of some governments will be to enact more repression. There will be bad news in places, and there will be some companies that fail. We have to be prepared for that as investors – and be prepared to act when opportunity knocks.

Some of the fear surrounding emerging markets last year and early this year now appears overblown. From a liquidity perspective, the Fed is not the world’s only liquidity provider: Japan has implemented its own quantitative easing program, China’s monetary base has increased, and the European Central Bank (ECB) recently announced a new swath of stimulus measures.

Performance of indices during 2013 “taper tantrum”


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Source: FE Analytics

It is also important to note that, to date, the Fed has not sharply tightened policy to slow an overheating economy. On the contrary, the US economy appears to be coming off life support as the extraordinary policy measures of recent years are being gradually unwound.

Many US investors were and still are underweight emerging markets according to our research, but we’ve recently seen some increased interest. We suspect that the excitement about the US market as it recovered from the 2007 – 2008 financial crisis caused people to put money there and keep it there.

Now we have seen interest in spreading some of those assets to other markets. The same sort of investor dynamic seems to be taking place in Europe. After a recent seven-country tour around Europe, I was happy to find increased investor interest in emerging markets. People seem to be starting to diversify their assets a bit more.

There are a number of key elections coming up in emerging markets that could prove quite revolutionary. In India, Narendra Modi’s landslide victory proved within a short period how quickly sentiment and stock prices can change.


We believe the reform outlook for many emerging markets looks the brightest it has in years. China’s government under President Xi has signaled its intention to embark upon extensive reform, and in Indonesia, presidential frontrunner Joko Widodo has announced ambitious plans to cut subsidies and increase investment. These are just a few examples.

From an investment standpoint, the use of smartphones has had a big impact globally, changing not only the political climate, but the consumer one as well. Mobile shopping, banking and payment systems are now at the fingertips of people in markets where most of the people just a few years ago had almost no method of fast and widespread communication.

The impact of the Internet is incredible, in our view. We are finding bloggers in emerging markets mentioning products, Facebook communities in emerging markets where people buy and sell from each other, to name a few examples.

I think this leapfrogging of technology has the potential to accelerate growth as well in many countries, which essentially don’t have to bear any cost of restructuring, or even building, brick-and-mortar stores and bank branches.

Companies can now reach people in remote places they never could before. This is exciting, but does not necessarily mean we focus solely on the consumer sector, where valuations might be elevated relative to other sectors.

We take an unconstrained approach in that we don’t make decisions based on a particular benchmark, and can gain indirect exposure via banking stocks with strong micro-lending businesses, or the industrials sector in transportation, for example.

Mark Mobius has run the £1.9bn Templeton Emerging Markets trust since 1989. It is currently trading on a 9.25 per cent discount to net asset value (NAV).

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