- Emerging stock markets stand at two-decade relative lows to developed ones
- US S&P 500 represents record high amount of total global stock market value
- US rate cuts give emerging markets scope to follow suit
- A weaker dollar and stronger commodity prices could be potential catalysts for a return to favour for emerging markets
“Next week, Russia will host the latest annual BRICS summit in Kazan and for all that one of the meeting’s laudable goals is to tackle neglected tropical diseases, few investors may be inclined to pay attention to the bulk of the quintet of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa,” says AJ Bell investment director Russ Mould. “Geopolitics and sanctions mean Russia is beyond the pale, South Africa’s economic performance is patchy, Brazil is raising interest rates rather than cutting them and China has to contend with the after-effects of a real estate bust.
“This could be the latest test of Sir John Templeton’s so-called principle of maximum pessimism. The fund management legend once stated, ‘People are always asking me where the outlook is good, but that is the wrong question. The right question is: where is the outlook most miserable?’
“India’s headline Sensex stock market index trades at all-time highs, as do Brazil’s BOVESPA and South Africa’s JSE All-Share benchmark, as if to back up Sir John’s assertion. Brazil’s BOVESPA is down slightly in 2024, but China is the one to really let the side down, as the CSI 300 still trades no higher than it did in 2007, even after its recent rally.
“And that rally shows how easy it could be for sentiment to turn.
“Fresh measures from Beijing to stimulate its flagging economy have given the headline indices in Shanghai and Hong Kong a huge boost. So downbeat was sentiment, and so lowly were valuations, that it took relatively little to stoke fresh interest.
Source: LSEG Refinitiv data. Local currency terms to 17 October.
“It remains to be seen whether China’s recovery can be sustained, and some disappointment is already creeping in judging by the cool reception given to the latest announcements from the Ministry for Housing and Urban-Rural Development.
“Even so, this is a timely reminder that Emerging Markets (EMs) overall have underperformed Developed Markets (DMs) for more than a decade. On a relative basis, EMs trade no higher now compared to DMs than they did in 2001, after which point the bursting of the tech bubble and return to favour of cyclical, value stocks brought EMs back into favour.
Source: LSEG Refinitiv data
“Contrarian investors could therefore be forgiven for asking themselves whether it is now time for a fresh look at EMs, given how the world is once more in thrall to tech stocks and US equities in particular.
Source: LSEG Refinitiv data
“China and Hong Kong have given one hint of what could be a potential catalyst for stronger performance from EMs, in relative and absolute terms, namely fiscal and particularly monetary stimulus.
“Beijing has cut interest rates, lowered the amount of capital that banks had to hold (so they could lend more) and eased the rules on consumer purchases of property. There is still much more to do, if China is to sustainably boost growth and ensure that consumption becomes its main economic engine instead of construction and exports, and proposals for land reform at July’s Third Plenum offer a hint of what may be to come.
“More widely, interest rate cuts could help EMs, whose central banks were generally quicker to hike headline borrowing costs as inflation broke out in the wake of the pandemic. They now have scope to cut rates, especially as the US Federal Reserve has started to do the same. EMs have had to wait, because their currencies would have weakened (and given inflation fresh impetus) had they moved before the Fed.
“Lower rates could boost local GDP growth and benefit corporate earnings across markets which can be heavily exposed to cyclicals and financials, and other economically sensitive sectors, either domestically or across international markets.
Source: LSEG Refinitiv data
“If the Fed really gets going on interest rate cuts, then the dollar could weaken. A drop in the buck, as benchmarked by the trade-weighted DXY (or ‘Dixie’) index, is traditionally seen as helpful for EMs, especially those with dollar borrowings. Lower rates and a softer dollar lower the cost of servicing those overseas debts and the reduced interest bills leave scope for more proactive government investment elsewhere.
Source: LSEG Refinitiv data
“If interest rate cuts and a weaker dollar are two possible catalysts for improved EM equity market performance, then a third is strength in commodity prices.
“This could reflect how some EMs are key producers and exporters of raw materials, notably Brazil and South Africa. It may also be the result of how EMs are plugged into global growth more widely through their exports (and if global growth is strong then demand for commodities is likely to be elevated). Commodities can also do well when inflation is running strongly, as investors seek havens and assets that can protect wealth relative to cash and paper assets, and also feel less inclined to pay up for secular growth assets when cyclical growth is more freely (and probably cheaply) available from value plays, such as EMs.
Source: LSEG Refinitiv data
“The dangers to EMs are therefore that the US cuts rates more slowly than thought, the dollar gains ground, inflation remains subdued and commodity prices soften, to continue the world’s love affair with tech and America – in other words, the trends of the last two decades stay in place to leave EMs out of favour, yet again.”