Expected Returns in Emerging Markets

Emerging market equities continue to perform poorly relative to U.S. stocks, a trend that now has persisted for nearly 8 years, since 2011. This poor relative performance is largely explained by the very high starting level of EM valuations, which may be considered to have reached “bubble” levels during the 2008-2012 period.  However, valuations are now back to attractive levels both in historical and relative terms, particularly compared to the richly valued U.S. market, so investors can expect returns in emerging markets to do considerably better over the next 5-10 years. Nevertheless, EM stocks continue to fare poorly, and they have underperformed the S&P 500 by a large margin over both the past quarter and the past year. Furthermore, short-term prospects appear muted, as macro factors provide significant challenges. IMF Manager Director Christine Lagarde reminded us of this this week in pointing out the “precarious” state of the global economy.

Experience tells us that EM assets perform well when there is strong global growth accompanied by a weakening U.S. dollar, the opposite of current conditions. What we have seen since 2012, pretty much on a persistent basis, is relatively weak global growth and a strengthening dollar. This has led to a condition of tight global dollar liquidity, marked by consistent flows into dollar assets. Ironically, this condition of the markets has allowed for massive amounts of issuance of dollar-denominated debts by EM corporates, which now may face severe difficulties in refinancing these loans if the trends of global weakness and dollar strength persist.

Nevertheless, the scenario is not all bad for EM assets. Several developments point to improving conditions going forward:  looser U.S. monetary policy; and a recovering Chinese economy which in turn is driving an increase in commodity prices.

The charts below illustrate current market conditions. The first chart shows global liquidity as measured by the U.S. monetary base (M2) and international dollar reserves. The recent surge can be attributed to the “Fed pivot,” and, if sustained, would be supportive of better global dollar liquidity. The second chart, from Yardeni.com, shows a different measure based on international trade surpluses and reserves, less supportive of an improvement in liquidity conditions. The third chart, also from Yardeni.com, shows the MSCI EM currency index, which represents the performance of the currencies in the benchmark relative to the USD. The recent uptick in the data is caused by the strengthening of the yuan and Indian rupee in recent weeks. On an equal weighted basis, the persistent strengthening of the dollar is still very obvious, and, overall, we can state that the dollar strengthening trend looks to be intact.  

Finally, the third macro factor which is highly correlated to positive EM performance – the price trend of commodities – is shown below. The chart shows the recent surge in the CRB Raw Industrials index, and especially the metals component. This is a clear sign that China’s stimulus is having an impact, and certainly a bullish sign for emerging market assets.

In conclusion, macro factors are a mixed-bag. Global growth is weak and the dollar is strong; on the other hand, there are some signs of improved dollar liquidity and commodity prices are acting well. The balance will tilt depending on China, with a recovery in the Chinese economy during the second half of this year supporting an improved environment for EM investors.

        Valuations are Compelling

The main reason to own emerging market equities is that after a long period of underperformance they are now inexpensive relative to their own history and compared to the U.S. market. For the investor with a long-term  view, current valuation strongly argue for increasing allocations to the asset class. The following table ranks the expected returns for the major EM countries as well as for the global emerging market benchmark and for the S&P 500. The dollarized nominal expected returns are derived by assuming that market Cyclically Adjusted Price Earnings(CAPE) ratios return to historical averages. Then this multiple is applied to “normalized earnings” which take into account where a country is in terms of its business-earnings cycle. Finally, normalized earnings are grown for the seven-year period by nominal USD-denominated GDP.

The table points to attractive returns for EM equities over the period, compared to very low returns in U.S. equities. An investor should seek to enhance EM returns by overweighting the highly discounted “riskier” markets such as Turkey, Colombia, Malaysia and Russia.

Similar exercises by GMO (Link) and Research Affiliates (Link) shown below reach slightly different conclusions but all point to significantly superior returns in EM relative to other asset classes.  

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