Wall Street Week Ahead: Investors bet emerging markets
will weather coronavirus impact
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[February 15, 2020] By
April Joyner
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Investors are edging back into emerging markets,
even though worries about the coronavirus' impact on global economic
growth have clouded prospects for the boom-and-bust asset class.
Nearly $730 million flowed back into emerging markets exchange-traded
funds (ETFs) in the past week, according to Lipper, after two straight
weeks of outflows that accompanied sharp declines in the stocks and
currencies of developing countries.
The MSCI Emerging Markets Index <.MSCIEF>, which measures stock
performance, has rebounded 4% from its early February low, though it
remains down on the year. Another index measuring emerging markets
currency performance <.MIEM00000CUS> was still sharply lower, reflecting
the slide in a range of currencies from Asia to Latin America.
As of Friday, the coronavirus has infected 63,581 people and killed
1,380. Still, investors have grown more hopeful that economic damage
will be limited.
Before the outbreak, emerging markets stocks had steadily climbed since
early December as analysts forecast a re-acceleration of global economic
growth and the United States and China agreed on a Phase 1 trade deal.
Chinese equities make up roughly a third of the weighting in the MSCI
Emerging Markets Index.
Emerging markets ETFs have seen a steady stream of money pouring in
since late October and have not had outflows on a monthly basis, Lipper
data showed.
"The valuations are really compelling, and we were seeing signs of an
economic recovery," said Robert Phipps, director at Per Stirling Capital
Management. "Once the coronavirus is put on pause, I think that will
become the primary trend again."
Phipps, who did not hold emerging markets stocks, has added them so that
they now make up about 6% of his portfolio. A weaker dollar would likely
compel him to boost that position, he said.
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Traders work at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York,
U.S., February 4, 2020. REUTERS/Bryan R Smith
Should the currency decline, countries that have borrowed in dollars would find
it easier to service their debt.
Other financial institutions, including BlackRock, JPMorgan and UBS Global
Wealth Management, are also sanguine on the prospects for emerging markets in
2020, even though the asset class has underperformed U.S. stocks for more than a
decade.
Emerging markets stocks have been more resilient of late in large part because
they have languished for so long, said Michael Purves, chief executive of
Tallbacken Capital Advisors.
"There's not really a case to sell them, because they're already massively
under-owned," he said.
Options activity also points to investor resilience. The gap between the Cboe
Emerging Markets ETF Volatility Index <.VXEEM> and the Cboe Volatility Index <.VIX>,
seen as an indicator of investor risk aversion, was 3.6 points on Friday
afternoon. That compares with a 7.25-point gap in May 2019, when trade tensions
between the United States and China were near their peak.
The economic impact of the coronavirus outbreak in unknown. Some analysts have
estimated that China's yearly gross domestic product growth could fall to
between 4% and 5%, down from the 6% annual growth the Chinese government
previously estimated.
But some investors expect the shortfall in growth to be largely contained to the
first quarter, which would give China's economy room to catch up later this
year.
"It's a relatively short-term factor," said Jim Besaw, chief investment officer
at GenTrust. "We probably won't be talking about it in April and May."
(Reporting by April Joyner; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili, David Gregorio and Dan
Grebler)
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