Compelling reasons to invest in emerging markets

In recent years, investors have viewed emerging markets a bit like marmite, the distinctly flavoured spread made from brewer’s yeast: they either like the allocation or they don’t.

Witness Swiss pension fund Compenswiss, at the sharp end of weak passive performance in emerging market equities that chief investment strategist Frank Juliano attributes to the dominance in the index of poorly performing China A shares.

“We plan to decrease our allocation to emerging market equities as we do not expect China to outperform in spite of the recent stimulative measures.”

Padmesh Shukla

For others, emerging markets remain an important source of diversification and return. At the £14 billion TfL Pension Fund, an open scheme for workers across London’s transport network, chief investment officer Padmesh Shukla oversees diversified opportunities in emerging market public and private equity, debt, infrastructure, and even hedge funds.

“Emerging markets provide one of the highest equity risk premiums, although that hasn’t been the case now for some time. We are not looking to unwind our exposure, majority through active mandates, because it is consistent with our long-term investment thesis, providing diversification and unique growth opportunities.”

Sponsored Content

 

Many investors see the opportunity in emerging markets’ favourable demographics, growth and maturing capital markets that are transforming liquidity and diversification opportunities. But worries about China, governance, and performance paling in comparison to US equities, seem to have left others on the sidelines.

For example, Canada’s $675 billion CPP Investments has seen strong returns in emerging market infrastructure, particularly toll roads in Mexico, Chile and Indonesia, and renewable energy in India and Brazil. But Ed Cass, chief investment officer of CPP Investments, says geopolitical risk and improving market efficiency is changing opportunities, and the fund is investing less than before.

“Our exposure was 22 per cent at the end of fiscal 2023. Since then, we have already transitioned towards our revised long-term strategic portfolio exposure target of 16 per cent.”

Colin Purdie, global chief investment officer of public markets at Manulife Investment Management believes successful investment rests on embracing an alpha play that involves picking investments according to different growth rates and capital market assumptions.

Active investment is not just a way to skirt the impact of crisis in China’s property sector and weak domestic consumption weighing on the broad index. Stock picking enables investors to focus on emerging names and escape the dominance of commodity plays, state-owned companies and old economy industries in the index where capital allocation is less efficient and governance weaker.

“The returns are still on offer, just not at a market level as a whole,” he says.

He believes the prospect of tariffs makes active management even more compelling: GDP in Mexico and China could suffer but countries like the Philippines, Thailand and Indonesia may do well from accelerating supply chain shifts.

Meanwhile India’s economy is insulated by domestic demand and local consumption. In another scenario that also speaks to the benefits of “picking your spot,” Purdie says China’s response to tariffs could be positive for the domestic economy if more fiscal stimulus comes through.

China is too big to ignore

It leads him to reflect that investor confidence in China could rebound if government efforts to kick start the economy start to bear fruit.

Global institutional investors like $203.7 billion Teachers Retirement System of Texas and Canada’s $110 billion Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan (HOOPP) have whittled down their exposure to China to close to zero, and domestic investors are also under-weight.

But a return to stability could see an outsized move if domestic investors put their money to work.

Moreover, many investors are sitting with a positive tilt to India but may not stick with India where valuations are relatively stretched, if momentum returns to China.

“With valuations at cheap levels and extreme under-ownership, a sustained fiscal and monetary stimulus will trigger further equity performance. The CSI 300 is up 25 per cent from the end of September post the initial central government directive on stimulus. This will clearly need to be countered with what appears to be an increasingly hawkish rhetoric from the new US administration,” he says, adding: “Previous stimulus has triggered a trough to peak move in China of 30 per cent. The idea that India is the new China is a lazy narrative. China is too big to ignore.”

The attraction of emerging market debt

Colin Purdie

Purdie believes emerging market debt offers one of the most compelling investment opportunities in the current market. Manulife Investment Management approaches the allocation with strong conviction backed by fundamentals. The team breaks risk factors down to their country and sector level, evaluating geopolitical risk and potential changes in the sovereign rating that could alter a corporate credit profile and flag potential liquidity squeezes.

Recent debt restructuring in Ukraine, Zambia, and Egypt illustrated the dependency of emerging economies on international commitments and loans coming through. For example. Egypt’s receipt of $57 billion in global aid changed investors’ perception and stemmed outflows in the wake of the sovereign downgrade.

Active duration positioning also makes money and supports portfolio construction by introducing hedging tools. If investors are positioned in a name, country, and sector that suddenly performs poorly, a duration position can protect them on the other side.

“Risk off moves come through quickly in emerging markets. Treasury yields come down and prices go up and this can act as a good hedge. It’s an important tool in portfolio construction” he says, adding that if lower rates materialise in developed markets, flows into emerging market debt will also pick up.

“Higher rates in developed markets have dented investor enthusiasm for emerging market debt because they don’t need to stretch into other areas for yield.”

Getting the governance right

Commentators say governance is perhaps the most important risk to navigate. History isn’t short of examples of investors putting the hunt for yield before governance in emerging markets. For Purdie, one of the most infamous is investor losses from sterling-denominated Kazakhstani bank bonds in 2008.

“Investors were so keen to get involved because there was a bit more of a spread, but they didn’t price the governance right,” he recalls. “Nothing makes a bond go from par to zero quicker than governance, particularly if it’s related to fraud.”

This governance risk is the main reason private credit isn’t included in TfL Pension Fund’s extensive emerging market allocation, explains Shukla.

Uncertainties around the rule of law and bankruptcy processes can leave investors out of pocket, particularly because the position of private credit in the capital structure can limit the ability to enforce security.

Boots on the ground

It’s why hands-on investment is crucial. Manulife Investment Management and CPP Investments have local teams in emerging markets to bring essential best practice, depth, skill, and experience to manage assets both internally and with local external partners.

Ed Cass

“We believe that one of the keys to success is to have boots on the ground,” says Cass. “We have offices in key markets, which allows us to better understand the businesses we invest in and the environment in which they operate.  It also positions us to partner with the best regional and national firms.”

Similarly, Manulife Investment Management’s on-the-ground analysis goes beyond knowing the corporate to building relationships with government representatives and authorities to understand the local market and culture. It ensures the team get in front of any red flags, especially sudden bouts of illiquidity that can make it difficult for investors to exit.

It also informs Purdie’s cautiously optimistic view that momentum might return to China off the back of more government fiscal stimulus.

“The local view in Beijing is that the government will do more,” he concludes.

Leave a Comment

How the Future Fund built a TPA culture that scales

How the Future Fund built a TPA culture that scales

The total portfolio approach has allowed Australia’s sovereign wealth fund to capture the themes that will power markets and economies for decades to come, said director of thought leadership Craig Thorburn – but that doesn’t mean it’s not hard to scale.

Sort content by

Wisdom: The jewel in the dirt-pile of intelligence

In his regular column for Top1000funds.com, Tim Hodgson, co-founder of the Thinking Ahead Institute at WTW, reflects on the dangers of unconstrained action, the limits of efficiency, and why long-term sustainability may depend on knowing when not to act.

When states lose the ability to govern, populism rises

Stephen Kotkin, global geopolitical expert and Stanford academic, has warned that there is an “increasing governability challenge in high-income democracies” where government departments face declining capacity to perform core functions due to complex regulatory systems and bureaucratic tasks. 

Inside NBIM’s AI playbook to hone investment edge

Norges Bank is a lean organisation despite managing a $2.2 trillion portfolio. Across the fund’s four global offices, there are only 700 staff, or $3 billion per person, which is why it has made pursuing AI-driven efficiency a core organisation initiative – and a non-negotiable requirement for its employees. 

Investors unpack regime-based portfolio thinking 

Funds are operating in an extraordinary environment, with Scott Chan, chief investment officer of CalSTRS, saying he has never witnessed so many “large shifts stacked on top of the other” in his investment career. Amid the change, investors are increasingly shifting to a scenario and regime-based asset allocation.  

AI investors face post-Moore’s Law reality

Mark Horowitz, a leading computer scientist and electrical engineer at Stanford University, has declared that Moore’s Law is “basically over”, which will have significant ramifications for artificial intelligence investors who are counting on more computing power to feed into more complex models.  

Public-private partnerships key to fixing US infrastructure

The size of the current infrastructure investment gap and the speed at which it is widening mean there is both a desire and a need for more public-private partnerships to unlock funding. Investors say that collaboration with local governments and raising public awareness of private investment benefits are crucial. 

Previous