Blogginlägg med etiketten BRIC

Peter Elam Håkanssons bild
2011-02-07 (Comments)

There are various trends within investing just like with many other things in the world. During the last few years the focus has been on Emerging Markets (currently Growth Markets).

The primary focus has been on the four large so called BRIC countries; Brazil, Russia, India and China. After that, there was the launch of N-11 (Next Eleven), in other words eleven more important countries that together can influence the world economy. The latest investment craze is so called Frontier Markets. This is pretty much everything else but focuses on the Middle East, Africa, certain countries in South Asia and some parts of Emerging Europe (Central Asia, Ukraine, the Balkans and the Baltics).

Our favourite markets are going strong

The latter countries are of special interest to us and we are happy to see that development in the beginning of this year has favoured several of our favourite markets. Serbia is up almost 20% in January while Greece, Bulgaria, Hungary, Croatia, Latvia, Romania and Estonia are all up over 10% (all in USD). At East Capital we have always felt that it is important to follow what is happening on all markets in Eastern Europe and not only the large markets. Therefore our funds are uniquely positioned in order to take advantage of the great interest in Frontier Markets.

The Eastern European Fund currently has investments in 20 countries. The very best exposure to this part of our world, however, is found in our specialized funds. First we have our daily traded funds, the Balkan Fund and the Baltic Fund. There are also the quarterly traded Bering Funds:

Special funds for unique exposure

Where could you otherwise find exposure towards small exciting companies in the Balkans, Ukraine or Georgia than through these specialised funds? Yet another good route is our listed investment company East Capital Explorer which has good exposure towards these funds and thereby these countries. As a matter of fact the largest holding in East Capital Explorer is a Romanian company, Fondul Proprietatea.

“Our closest neighbours in Eastern Europe are going strong right now. They managed their domestic devaluations and kept their currencies pegged to the Euro. Estonia even converted to the Euro at the beginning of the year.”

Following the conversion they have benefited from the weakness of the Euro towards other currencies, the Swedish Kronor among them. This means that the enormously competitive Baltic export sector that already had a strong position in Sweden has strengthened its position further. Baltic companies are often suppliers to Swedish industries and the strong export boom they are experiencing also benefits the Baltic States.

Peter Elam Håkansson
Written on flight LX 435 (Swiss) between London and Geneva

(Comments) | Taggar: Balkan, Baltics, BRIC
Guest blogger - bnes bild
2010-09-28 (Comments)

The landscape has changed completely as a result of the global economic crisis and in September Goldman Sachs released a report that recalibrates its classic 2001 paper that introduced the world to the idea of the Bric markets.

The equity market capitalisation of the emerging markets has exploded over the last 10 years, rising from $2 trillion in 2000 to about $14 trillion today. At the same time, the market capitalisation of the developed markets has only increased from $29 trillion a decade ago to $30 trillion now.

That statistic is shocking, since by all accounts it should have doubled: numerous studies have shown that the long-term average return from equity investments is about 8% - which means that if you invest $100 in stocks, it should double in value every 10 years or so, not end up at $103. If you count inflation into the equation, then you have actually lost money, which the developed markets did over the last decade.

Over the same period, emerging markets not only beat developed market investments hands down, they soared seven-fold: the same $100 invested in emerging markets would have been worth $700 at the end of the decade, according to Goldman's calculations.

Furthermore, Goldman says that while the pace of growth in the value of emerging stock markets will slow, they will still handsomely outpace those in the West: Goldman predicts that the value of developed equity markets will rise by half from $30 trillion today to $46 trillion in 2020, and slightly less than half in the following decade to reach $66 trillion by 2030. By 2030, the value of emerging stock markets will have reached $80 trillion and the world's financial centre of gravity will have shifted for good.

 

(Comments) | Taggar: BRIC, market capitalisation
Marcus Svedbergs bild
2010-02-08 (Comments)

The Russia Forum organised by Troika Dialog in Moscow last week was not only about Russia. The majority of the plenary and panel discussions rather focused on the role of emerging markets after the global crisis.

Such topics are hardly new but as the panels were dominated by experts from emerging markets rather than Western Europeans and Americans, which is often the case, the insights were more interesting than usual. Jim O'Neil, the founder of the BRIC concept visited Moscow the week before and concluded that only weirdoes argued for the removal of the R in BRIC. A similar sentiment, albeit in more diplomatic terms, was evident in the Troika conference. It is true that Russia has suffered harder from the global crisis than many other emerging markets but that has not destroyed the longer term catch-up process and Russia is indeed recovering faster than most analysts predicted.

Even though there was an overall strong belief in Russia as a core member of the BRIC group (and for Eastern Europe in the wider emerging market world), it was also clear that China is the shining star of the group. Just as Greece and other highly indebted Western countries are always mentioned in a negative way (see previous posting from Vienna), so is China and to a lesser extent India mentioned in a positive way at international conferences and in discussions about global development.

There are some renewed talk about decoupling, stemming from the strong Chinese and Indian growth during the global recession, but that is still premature and at best partial. There are, however, an increasing amount of interaction between the world’s leading emerging markets and trade and investment flows between developing countries are growing very fast, thus gradually reducing the reliance on the OECD countries. 

For East Capital, one of the most interesting aspects of this trend is the strong interest to develop the ties between Russia and China. It was debated at the conference whether Moscow’s stronger focus on Sino-Russian relations represent a strategic new direction (i.e. Russia turning to the East at the expense of the West). The verdict may still be out on that but I believe it is not a zero-sum game and that it makes perfect economic sense for Russia and China to develop their commercial relations. It is a perfect fit since Russia has the resources China needs and China is willing to make the investment Russia needs in order to get access to those resources.    

We often claim that it is important to be in Eastern Europe in order to understand Eastern Europe. We can perhaps add that it is equally important to be in emerging markets to understand one of the most fascinating development within these markets, that is how they increasingly open up to another and increase their prosperity as a result.

(Comments) | Taggar: BRIC, Russia

Om bloggen

Långsiktighet och lokal närvaro är grunden för East Capitals investeringsfilosofi. I den här bloggen vill vi dela med oss av aktuella insikter från Östeuropa & Kina och dess investeringsklimat. Engelska är gemensamt för de flesta av våra investerare och är därför det främsta språket för blogginläggen.

Bloggpolicy

East Capitals blogg är avsedd som en kontaktyta mellan webbplatsens besökare och företrädare för East Capital. Det är viktigt att uppmärksamma att uttalanden som görs av företrädarna för East Capital inte nödvändigtvis utgör East Capitals officiella ståndpunkt. Under inga omständigheter ska uttalanden på bloggen uppfattas som investeringsrådgivning och East Capital är inte ansvarigt för någon skada eller förlust som någon av webbplatsens besökare eller annan orsakas genom att förlita sig på uttalanden på bloggen.

Även om East Capital inte kontrollerar de kommentarer som skickas in av användarna, förbehåller sig East Capital rätten att avstå från att publicera, fördröja publicering av, ta bort, flytta eller redigera användarkommentarer till bloggen. East Capital accepterar inte kommentarer som är oförskämda, hotfulla eller förolämpande. Användarna ska avstå från att skicka in kommentarer som inte har med bloggens ämne att göra, innehåller reklam eller har ett olagligt innehåll, eller kommentarer som det kan anses utgöra ett brott att publicera (exempel på sådana brott är insiderbrott, otillbörlig marknadspåverkan och intrång i annans immateriella rättigheter).

Genom att skicka in en kommentar till bloggen ger du East Capital en rätt att använda kommentaren, helt eller delvis, i East Capitals marknadsföring eller på annats sätt, utan att ge dig någon ersättning.
Om du är av uppfattningen att en kommentar har publicerats på bloggen i strid med denna bloggpolicy ber vi dig att anmäla detta till: blog [at] eastcapital [dot] com

Våra bloggare

  • Karine Hirns bild

    Partner och Chief Representative, Shanghai-kontoret. Karine bloggar om East Capital, våra fondprodukter och ger direktrapporter från Shanghai.

  • Marcus Svedbergs bild

    East Capitals chefekonom fokuserar på makroekonomi, analyser och omvärldshändelser som påverkar utvecklingen i regionen.

  • Vesna Luccas bild
    East Capitals kommunikationschef skriver främst om East Capital som företag och aktuella mediefrågor.
  • Kristina Sandklefs bild

    Kristina, makroekonom Asien, delar med sig av sina erfarenheter och analyserar trender och händelser som påverkar Kina.

Prenumerera på blogginlägg

Fyll i din e-postadress:

Login