Opportunities in APAC: Diverse and dynamic

“If you are looking to improve return expectations, we see most opportunities in India, Taiwan, Japan and the Philippines. If you are trying to reduce valuation multiples in the portfolio, South Korea and China are undervalued,” she says.

Elsewhere, different countries are emerging as global leaders in specific sectors like cashless payment innovation in China.

At the NZ$77.1 billion New Zealand Superannuation Fund, a passive reference portfolio split 80:20 between equities and bonds guides the Auckland-based sovereign investor’s risk-on approach. A total portfolio strategy eschews any country-level approach apart from an overweight to New Zealand where acting CIO Alex Bacchus counts the largest investments in private forestry and agriculture alongside a sizeable allocation to public markets.

However, NZ Super does run an active return strategy that strategically tilts to take positions at a country and regional level across equities, rates, currency and credit based on the team’s views of long-term fair value.

In Asia, this most recently manifest in an overweight to the Japanese yen (reduced since the yen has strengthened) that was also long Japanese equities. The strategy also played into improved governance amongst Japanese corporates where Bacchus notes regulation is pushing companies to return more money to shareholders.

“We don’t try and forecast what is going to happen in the next few months, but take positions based on our long-term view of valuations,” he says.

Sponsored Content

Michael Hasenstab, executive vice president and chief investment officer for Templeton Global Macro, also flags currency opportunities in Japan as an example of the region’s diversification. Although he is wary of Japanese fixed income because of potential upward pressure on bond yields, he argues the yen continues to stand out from a structural perspective.

“We expect the Japanese yen to potentially benefit as corporate behaviour and the labor market shift to more productive structures, reflation takes hold, monetary policy normalizes, and reshoring takes advantage of Japan’s strategic and comparative advantages.”

Another example is Thailand’s $34 billion Government Pension Fund which runs an active, top-down investment strategy that also avoids allocating to any specific country. But Man Juttijudata, senior director, strategic and tactical asset allocation who is responsible for GPF’s active investment strategy, says the region’s diversification benefits play an increasingly important role.

For example, he recently parred down the allocation to Thai equity in favour of a wider emerging market allocation.

“We try to reduce our home bias. We first stepped outside Thailand with our allocation to developed markets, but we found we still had a large domestic allocation so allocated more to emerging markets. We only have a very small allocation to Thai equity today.”

Juttijudata adds that GPF is innately comfortable stepping into India or frontier markets like Vietnam and is planning to increase private equity investment in Thailand and the Philippines.

“We are Thai, we are already risky,” he reflects. Still, he is mindful of the challenges in the region, particularly the lack of regulation around infrastructure, and most of GPF’s public and direct real estate and infrastructure investment is either in Europe or Australia.

Attractive income streams

Fixed income provides the same diversification benefits as equity or a particular currency exposure. Australia is a favourite allocation for investment grade sovereign investors on one hand. On the other, those same investors can tap into duration and yield advantages in other countries – albeit with an eye on the oftentimes lack of liquidity and the need for more hedging instruments.

Hasenstab believes that the region’s low debt levels relative to developed markets where debt burdens rose during the pandemic also make a compelling reason to invest. China and India have relatively high fiscal balances, but many other emerging Asian countries have significantly smaller deficits or possibly even surpluses – for example, the IMF projects small fiscal surpluses for Korea from next year.

This provides an opportunity for investors seeking to diversify away from markets where fundamentals may mean more shaky returns for bonds, or where there are concerns about potential supply of bonds into the markets because of large deficits, he says.

On a cautionary note, NZ Super’s Bacchus warns that economies in APAC are not immune from developed market sovereign debt and the global debt imbalance.

“Many of these countries are tied to the US dollar, and debt levels in the West can influence what happens in Asia,” he says. “It hasn’t been an issue yet, but at some point it might be.”

GDP, growth and trade

Perhaps the other standout reason to invest in APAC is the region’s growth. Although Chinese growth remains challenged, Australia, South Korea and Indonesia have demonstrated consistently high growth rates whilst countries including Singapore, Philippines and India stand out for their high variability in GDP growth.

The region is significantly more vibrant than the mature western economies, argues Hasenstab who points to IMF expectations that Asian growth will hit 5.0 per cent in 2025 compared to 2.2 per cent for the US and 1.2 per cent for the EU.

Positively, NZ Super’s Bacchus also observes the pickup in Indian growth versus China, noting how emerging market indices have now rebalanced with more exposure to India than China.

“Equity returns in China have been low compared to India which is doing amazingly well.”

Index investors are mindful of the fact APAC has a reasonably small market cap relative to its GDP, potentially limiting opportunities. However, Bacchus counters a GDP-weighted portfolio approach can face issues relating to access and liquidity, and that globalization means economies and countries will always interact to some extent.

Tan says the region’s “healthy” consumption levels make APAC economies less reliant on exports for growth. And APAC is also benefiting from reshoring and friendshoring strategies, as well as “China plus one” where some supply risk is diversified away from China. Hasenstab argues the integration of supply chains leads to greater exports, but also “drives fixed investments in facilities as well.”

He cites Malaysia as an example of being well positioned to benefit from reshoring trends in another nod to the region’s extraordinary variety. “Malaysia is marketing itself as a neutral player geopolitically, hoping to continue to attract investment both from China and from the western-aligned bloc,” he concludes.

[vc_column_text css=””]Published in partnership with Franklin Templeton Investments

Leave a Comment

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

Portfolios built for the old world will be severely tested as emerging forces rewrite the rules of investing. The Fiduciary Investors Symposium heard that geopolitical and macroeconomic upheaval, together with the disruption wrought by AI, should force asset owners to rethink the structure and composition of portfolios.

Sort content by

Dutch transition: APG leans into data, IT and communication

APG has successfully shifted its smaller pension fund clients to the new defined contribution pension system and now begins the huge task of moving the giant ABP as well. The defined contribution system has many implications including shedding more than 1000 staff at APG and moving investments more into riskier assets.

AP2: SEC ‘no-action’ rollback could send more shareholder proposals to vote

AP2 has voiced its concerns around what impact the shift in US shareholder proposal exclusions, or the so-called “no-action letter” change, will bring to sustainability-conscious investors, as the Swedish buffer fund gears up for a busy year of engagement in 2026.

Nest favours institutional-first managers as retail exodus pressures private credit

Nest, the largest workplace pension in the UK, says that private credit managers who prioritise institutional clients will be more favourably viewed. The £61 billion ($82 billion) fund has awarded a £450 million ($605 million) US direct lending mandate to Crescent Capital this month, citing the manager's institutional-client-first approach as a key attraction.

Inside CPP Investments’ TPA engine

TPA allows investors to better manage investment trade-offs, such as liquidity, costs and alpha, and has public and private investments compete explicitly on a common risk-adjusted basis, according to a new paper by CPP Investments. The Canadian giant, which has been practising TPA for two decades, says TPA cannot eliminate uncertainty, but it helps build resilience to it.

Long term lens shields Colorado from private credit jitters

As concerns in private credit mount, Colorado PERA CIO and COO Amy McGarrity says the pension fund isn’t seeing any strains in its growing allocation to the asset class, arguing that long-term investors are shielded from the risks because they can lock up their capital to weather market cycles.

Canada to allow retail contribution to new SWF

Canada has established its first national-level sovereign wealth fund with a seed of C$25 billion ($18.3 billion) to underwrite “nation-building” projects like ports, mines and energy infrastructure. In an unusual funding mechanism, the fund will issue a retail product that will allow individual investors to invest with the SWF and “participate in Canada’s growth”.

Previous