Strongman trades trump
democratic deficits in 2017
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[August 02, 2017]
By Karin Strohecker and Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - Poland's tightening grip
on its judiciary has prompted nationwide protests and threats of
European sanctions, but its asset prices and currency have soared this
year as they have in plenty of other places where democracy has been
eroded.
The nationalist government in Warsaw may have angered European allies
and sparked demonstrations with bills empowering it to hire and fire top
judges but investors reckon the strong economy outweighs the risks.
The zloty <PLN=> and cost of insuring exposure to Polish investments
barely budged and Polish stocks and bonds are among this year's top
performers, with dollar-based returns of 38 percent and 15 percent
respectively. <.dMIPL00000PUS>
Returns have been strong across emerging markets this year, but the list
of top performers is peppered with countries where leaders are
strengthening their hold on power.
Turkish and Chinese stocks jumped more than 33 percent, while Egyptian
and Turkish dollar-bonds have returned more than 10 percent, showing
that markets love the economic benefits and certainty that strongman
politics can deliver.
"Providing governments are responsible fiscally they can get away with a
lot of undemocratic measures," said Renaissance Capital emerging market
fund manager Charlie Robertson.
"They can pretty much do what they want to their own country," he added.
"At least on a one-year horizon." Of course, as the likes of Zimbabwe
show, authoritarian leaders do not guarantee economic success. And
investment bets on undemocratic countries can turn sour - as they are
now in Venezuela amid Nicolas Maduro's latest power grab and did
recently in Saudi Arabia and Qatar.
Amid improving global growth and low interest rates it is not just
countries where politicians are strengthening their hold that have
rallied either. Chile, Brazil and South Africa have all made decent
gains despite political uncertainty.
But such countries have been far outshone by the likes of Poland,
Turkey, Egypt, Hungary and China, where in some cases the returns on
assets have been twice as strong.
The main thing for markets is a well-managed, growing economy where the
government lives within its means. Poland with robust growth, rising
wages and consumer demand offers all that.
"The economy story (in Poland) has a lot going for it, enough for people
to not worry too much about politics," said Kieran Curtis, investment
director for emerging markets at Standard Life Investments.
Turkey, one of this year's other top markets, also has a budget deficit
below 3 percent of GDP - as well as dynamic growth and favourable
demographics.
Its stock market fell last year after an attempted coup.
A subsequent crackdown by President Tayyip Erdogan has led to tens of
thousands of arrests, but Sacha Chorley, portfolio manager at Old Mutual
Global Investors said the country's strong fundamentals and profitable
companies have not changed.
ORBANOMICS
Any fallout from the democratic backsliding can affect longer term
investors like pension funds further down the line, since bonds' present
value is linked to when they will be repaid, which is often 5-10 years
away. Many are playing a much shorter-term game of a year or two though.
"Are these changes going to affect fixed income investors in this
period? At least in case of Poland, you can say: not that much,"
Standard Life's Curtis added.
Some longer term investors may also have in mind nearby Hungary.
The criticism leveled at Jaroslaw Kaczynski, who leads Poland's ruling
Law and Justice (PiS) party, echoes that aimed at Hungarian Prime
Minister Viktor Orban some years back and who Kaczynski is now close to.
'Orbanomics', as the policies were termed, included slapping huge taxes
on banks, energy, telecoms and retailers - often foreign-owned, angering
company bosses and EU regulators.
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Hungary's Prime Minister
Viktor Orban arrives for the NATO Summit in Warsaw, Poland, July 9,
2016. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel/File Photo
But fund managers who stuck with Hungary eventually reaped outsize returns.
Orbanomics also brought down Hungary's budget deficit, introduced a flat 15
percent income tax rate and appointed a central bank governor who launched a
huge stimulus program.
As a result, growth restarted, the deficit swung into surplus. Since the end of
2012, MSCI's Hungarian shares are up 40 percent <.dMIHU00000PUS>, far
outstripping broader emerging stocks <.MSCIEF> which are only now back to their
2012 levels.
"Trying to trade the institutional deterioration in Hungary in recent years was
one of the greatest lossmaking trades you could have made," said UBS strategist
Manik Narain.
"That's certainly one thing that's encouraging people to sit back and be careful
in Poland."
STRONGMAN MEDICINE
Democratic credentials have not just been pushed back across emerging markets.
The 167-nation "Democracy Index", compiled by the Economist Intelligence Unit,
downgraded the United States from a "full" to a "flawed" democracy in 2016. Yet
Wall Street has regularly hit record highs since then.
Hungary, Poland and Turkey have been sinking deeper into the "flawed" category
since 2015. Meanwhile Russia and Egypt both share the label of "authoritarian
regime".
Countries such as Singapore and China made economic development strides without
adhering to Western-style democracy but a major risk is the erosion of property
rights a particular problem for investors in Russia.
But there are prominent instances this year of illiberal leaders fuelling market
rallies by ramming through unpopular policies.
Egyptian sovereign dollar debt has returned over 10 percent, benefiting from
former military commander Abdel Fattah al-Sisi's moves to float the currency and
cut subsidies.
The measures, which finally put Egypt on the road to economic recovery, were
adopted despite a 20 percent inflation surge that hit the poorest the most and
sparked popular anger.
"In my opinion, a democratic government would not have been able to deliver
(those changes)," said Shahzad Hasan, a portfolio manager at Allianz Global
Investors. "So this was one example of where a strong man was able to deliver
the painful medicine that was needed."
Another example, notes Frederic Lamotte, CIO of Indosuez Wealth Management, is
India. Prime Minister Narendra Modi, criticized as authoritarian, has
implemented a tax overhaul delayed for decades by political wrangling that could
add 0.4 percent to the economy.
Since Modi's ascent, MSCI India has rallied 16 percent - double the gains of the
broader emerging equities index. "Weak leadership will never manage any
changes," Lamotte said.
EM stocks in 2017 http://tmsnrt.rs/2hn5N02
EM currencies in 2017 http://tmsnrt.rs/2hniYya
EM dollar-bond returns YTD http://reut.rs/2ePZ0j6
(Reporting by Karin Strohecker and Marc Jones, additional reporting by Sujata
Rao and Claire Milhench; editing by Philippa Fletcher)
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