Some investors bet Brazil
has further room to fall
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[May 27, 2017]
By Dion Rabouin and Trevor Hunnicutt
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Some investors are
betting the worst is yet to come for Brazil's stock market, even after a
brutal selloff last week.
Fund managers said troubles for Brazilian President Michel Temer, who
was caught on tape discussing a hush-money arrangement to buy the
silence of imprisoned former house speaker Eduardo Cunha, are likely
just beginning, and could derail efforts to reform Brazil's pension
system, moves aimed at cutting public debt and boosting economic growth.
Brazil's benchmark Bovespa stock index tumbled nearly 9 percent on May
18 after news of the tape surfaced, notching its biggest one-day drop
since the depths of the financial crisis in October 2008.
Short sellers descended on funds containing Brazilian shares on the
belief they have further to fall.
About 12 percent of shares of the $5.6 billion U.S.-listed iShares MSCI
Brazil Capped ETF are being shorted, according to S3 Partners, a
financial analytics firm. The fund ranks as the second most-shorted
country ETF in the United States by dollar value of short interest.
Investors who take short positions sell borrowed stock they hope to buy
back later at lower prices to reimburse the lenders, pocketing the
difference.
The Brazil ETF pulled in $526 million of new money in the week ended on
Wednesday, according to Thomson Reuters' Lipper research unit, but those
figures include shares created so they could be sold short.
"As EWZ's stock price dropped, short sellers needed to short more stock
in order to keep their risk positions at the same levels," said S3
Partners managing director of research Ihor Dusaniwsky.
EWZ's short sellers have a 9 percent profit since last Thursday, he
said, with most of that made the day of the big selloff.
To be sure, some of the fund's inflows could also be from investors
betting that the recent selloff does not reflect fundamentals
underpinning the market.
Mohit Bajaj, director of ETF trading solutions at WallachBeth Capital
LLC, said he has seen demand for EWZ over the past week from both
short-sellers and bargain-hunting "value" investors.
SELLING OUT
Robert Marshall Lee, investment leader and portfolio manager at BNY
Mellon subsidiary Newton Investment Management, has sold all Brazilian
assets in his company's $136 million Newton Global Emerging Markets
Fund.
Even if Temer stays in power his position has been significantly
weakened, Lee said, and with much of Brazil's population opposed to
fiscal restructuring measures like pension reform it would be difficult
to pass them.
[to top of second column] |
A demonstrator shows a picture of President Michel Temer near a
burning barricade during a protest against Temer and the latest
corruption scandal to hit the country, in Brasilia, Brazil, May 24,
2017. Picture taken May 24, 2017. The sign reads: "Out Temer!."
REUTERS/Ueslei Marcelino
"What you end up doing is a very watered-down version," he said. "So the market
has optimism and then gets disappointed and I think that's the likely path
ahead."
Brazil and broader emerging markets are likely to end the year with lower equity
prices and weaker currencies, Capital Economics senior emerging markets
economist William Jackson said.
Yet Brazil's problems have so far shown little sign of leaking into the broader
emerging markets sphere. The average U.S.-based emerging market fund tracked by
Lipper sank by just 0.4 percent over the most recent week and pulled in $1.1
billion in new cash.
Economists warn that Brazil's social security system is one of the main threats
to government finances there, with pension expenditures accounting for nearly
half of its spending before debt payments. Temer's plans to streamline Brazil's
pension system cleared another hurdle in Congress on Tuesday.
Current House speaker Rodrigo Maia said a vote in the full lower house could
take place between June 5 and June 12, clearing the way for a final Senate vote,
but many lawmakers have said they will not vote until the political crisis is
resolved.
Meanwhile, some investors are moving in on what they see as a buying opportunity
in Brazil. The Bovespa was last up 1.2 percent on Friday.
"If you are a patient long-term investor able and willing to stomach significant
volatility, current valuations offer an attractive opportunity to gradually
build both bond and equity positions," said Mohamed El-Erian, chief economic
adviser at Allianz SE. "There is value but the road will be very choppy."
Ivo Luiten, a portfolio manager at the emerging markets boutique firm NN
Investment Partners, in the Hague, Netherlands, said he had taken the
opportunity to add to his holdings in telecommunications, education and
healthcare stocks, which he said fell 10 percent to 15 percent in the selloff.
"We're not selling out of Brazil," he said. "We're adding."
(Reporting by Dion Rabouin and Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Jennifer Ablan and
Meredith Mazzilli)
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