Kina og Emerging Markets har haft en faldende tendens på aktiemarkederne. Markederne underperformede sidste år, og den udvikling fortsætter i år, skriver Morgan Stanley. Investorerne bør altså se efter muligheder andre steder. Morgan Stanley peger på Australien og Brasilien, der nyder godt af den mangel på råvarer, der er opstået på grund af krigen i Ukraine, og banken ser også positivt på Japan, fordi selskaberne er stærkt afhængige af udenlandsk indtjening, og den lave yen gavner de japanske selskaber.
Looking for Alternatives to Emerging Markets
Forecasts for China and other Emerging Markets have continued on a downtrend, extending last year’s underperformance, meaning investors might want to look into regions with a more favorable outlook.
Now, emerging market equities are underperforming again this year, and that’s extending last year’s underperformance versus developed market equities. And so indeed are China equities, the largest component of the Emerging Market Equities Index. This is confounding some of the optimism felt by some late last year that a China easing cycle could play its normal role in delivering a trend reversal.
We have retained our cautious stance for a number of reasons. Firstly, the more aggressive stance from the US Federal Reserve, signaling a rapid move higher in US rates, is leading to a stronger US dollar. This drives up the cost of capital in emerging markets and has a directly negative impact on earnings for the Emerging Markets Index, where around 80% of companies by market capitalization derive their earnings domestically.
Secondly, China’s own easing cycle is more gradual than prior cycles, and last week’s decision not to cut interest rates underscores this point. This decision is driven by the Chinese authorities desire not to start another leverage driven property cycle. Meanwhile, China remains firmly committed to tackling COVID outbreaks through a lockdown strategy, which is also weakening the growth outlook. Our economists have cut the GDP growth forecast for China several times this year as a result.
Beyond these two factors, there are also other issues at play undermining the case for emerging market equities. Most notably, the strong recovery in services spending in the advanced economies in recent quarters is leading to a weaker environment for earnings growth in some of the other major emerging market index constituents, such as Korea and Taiwan. They have benefited from the surge in work from home spending on goods during the earlier phases of the pandemic. Meanwhile, the geopolitical risks of investing in emerging markets more generally have been highlighted by the Russia Ukraine conflict and Russia’s removal from the MSCI Emerging Markets Index.
So what do we prefer? We continue to like commodity producers such as Australia and Brazil, which are benefiting from high agricultural, energy and metals prices. We also favor Japan, which, unlike emerging markets, has more than half of the index deriving its earnings overseas and therefore benefits from a weaker yen.