Emerging market tech stock boom gives fund managers a
headache
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[October 10, 2017]
By Helen Reid
LONDON (Reuters) - The boom in emerging
market technology stocks is becoming a problem for fund managers of all
stripes.
The soaring market capitalization of a handful of companies such as
China's Alibaba <BABA.N> and Tencent <0700.HK> is steadily lifting their
weighting in the MSCI emerging equities index <.MSCIEF>.
This means investors in funds that track indexes (exchange traded funds
or ETFs) - who want exposure to a range of companies for a lower fund
management fee - are finding themselves increasingly exposed to a single
sector.
Meanwhile, active fund managers, who justify charging higher fees for
their individual stock-picking expertise, are under pressure to buy
those tech stocks to ensure their funds keep up with the index's gains.
And with both sets of investor chasing the same thing, the risk of
dramatic outflows increases if the sector falters.
"It's the opposite of what you are trying to do with an ETF - you want
cheap diversified exposure but you end up being concentrated in
basically 10 stocks," said Rory McPherson, head of investment strategy
at Psigma, who holds active EM funds.
The biggest five emerging market companies in the index are tech firms
Alibaba, Tencent, Samsung <005930.KS>, Naspers <NPNJn.J> and Taiwan
Semiconductor <5425.TWO>.
They comprise almost 19 percent of the index's market capitalization.
That is a bigger chunk than the S&P 500 where the top five firms -
Alphabet <GOOGL.O> , Apple <AAPL.OQ>, Facebook <FB.O>, Microsoft <MSFT.OQ>,
and Amazon <AMZN.OQ> - make up 13 percent <.SPX>.
The increasing use of ETFs has helped boost valuations further because
they must follow the index weighting.
And the index’s concentration has intensified as valuations rose - the
five companies' share was 13.9 percent in January.
DISCOMFORT
The shift toward passive investing, evident across most asset classes,
has come into focus in emerging equities, which have enjoyed a sparkling
60 percent rally since early-2016. But the sector may also illustrate
the concentration risks that exchange-traded funds can bring to
portfolios.
Emerging equity funds have received some $56 billion so far this year,
Lipper data shows. Of this, $23 billion went into ETFs.
Investors are keen on tech companies which are making profits by
disrupting the status quo in sectors from media and advertising to
retail and industrials.
But the dependence on technology for returns is causing some discomfort
among investors who prefer shares in emerging market car or beverage
makers for instance for exposure to consumer demand in the developing
world.
Ed Kerschner, chief portfolio strategist at Columbia Threadneedle, says
the tech companies' performance mostly reflects that of their U.S. peers
rather than providing exposure to developing countries.
"The question is are you buying emerging markets or are you buying
technology?" Kerschner said. "The risk of buying EM benchmarks is that
you are not diversifying away from the S&P."
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An employee is seen behind a glass wall with the logo of Alibaba at
the company's headquarters on the outskirts of Hangzhou, Zhejiang
province, April 23, 2014. REUTERS/Chance Chan/File Photo
As a result of the tech rally, the conventional market-cap weighted emerging
equity index, with bigger weightings in companies with the largest market caps,
has begun strongly outperforming the index where all companies are assigned the
same weighting.
The success can also be reversed. Any faltering by the tech leaders would have a
proportionally weighty effect on ETFs, potentially spurring big outflows.
Scott Snyder, co-portfolio manager of the ICON emerging markets fund, estimates
that the four biggest tech firms have accounted for a third of 2017's emerging
equity returns.
"A lot of people that might just be piling into passive strategies in EM could
be overly exposed to technology right now," ICON's Snyder said.
THE "WRONG" REASON
There are also signs that many active emerging market managers, who would have
had more diverse investments than ETF funds, are sticking more closely to the
benchmark.
Data from Copley Fund Research shows the average active share of global emerging
market funds - the extent to which their holdings differ from the index - has
fallen to 74.7 percent from a peak of 78 percent in April 2016.
Partly this is due to the addition in May 2016 of U.S.-listed Chinese firms to
the emerging benchmark - because active investors held these stocks before their
inclusion in the index - but competition from ETFs may also play a role.
"The effect of rising ETF flows and narrowing breadth has been to push active
investors to get closer to their benchmarks," said Edward Cole, a portfolio
manager at GLG Man Group.
Even among active managers, many may be holding tech stocks for the "wrong"
reason - fear of underperforming the index, said Kiran Nandra-Koehrer, senior
product specialist in Pictet Asset Management's emerging equities team.
While many investors are wary of paying higher fees for funds to replicate the
index, active managers don't want to risk missing out on meaty returns from
tech.
A streak of losses and fund closures remains fresh in their mind, with 746
emerging market funds liquidated in the last five years, according to Lipper
data.
But Psigma's McPherson cited one of his holdings, Mirabaud's Emerging Markets
fund, which has returned over 33 percent this year, outgunning the MSCI index's
29 percent. That shows an active manager can overcome concentration risks.
"We would rather our active managers weight to the small tech companies that are
better value," McPherson said.
(Additional reporting by Sujata Rao and Claire Millhench, Graphics by Helen Reid
and Ritvik Carvalho; editing by Anna Willard)
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