Investment Strategies
INTERVIEW: Brexit Turmoil Only Highlights Asia's Attractions - Wells Fargo

The developed world's political turmoil has been one of the reasons for investors treating emerging markets, and China in particular, more kindly in recent weeks, a fund manager says.
Fewer people are making “doomsday” predictions about China, and
the Asian giant, along with certain other emerging markets, has
won back investment fans after the difficulties of recent years,
a fund manager says.
Concerns about the fragility of China’s financial sector and
economy, due to a deceleration in growth, have been
“hugely” overstated, creating a situation where assets such as
equities became highly attractive, Anthony Cragg, a senior
portfolio manager at Wells Fargo, told this publication recently.
Cragg is a lead portfolio manager of the
Luxembourg-registered China Equity Fund and Emerging Markets
Equity Income Fund at Wells Fargo Asset Management.
About $1 billion of international fund flows have gone into Asian
emerging markets over the past eight to nine days, Cragg said,
citing figures given on 20 July from Credit Suisse.
“That’s a pretty heavy infusion of investment,” said Cragg,
who was also interviewed here in February, when he was also
bullish amid difficult headlines. (To see
that interview, click here.)
The 23 June Brexit vote, which triggered a bout of volatility in
global markets, led some investors to take a more favourable
relative view of emerging markets on the assumption that they
would be less affected than some other regions, and so it has
proved, he continued.
Emerging markets have broadly outperformed their developed
counterparts since the start of the year, he said. For example,
the MSCI Emerging Market Index, in dollars, shows total returns
of 11.8 per cent so far this year, when capital returns and
reinvested dividends are taken into account. For the MSCI World
Index of developed countries’ equities, total returns are 3.96
per cent (source: MSCI Barra).
As far as China is concerned, the MSCI China 50 A Index shows
total returns (capital growth plus reinvested dividends) of
2.8 per cent, in dollars.
China has continued to open its doors to investors, widening
investment quotas for foreign investors, allowing Hong Kong-based
and mainland China-based funds to be bought and sold cross-border
in both locations, and loosening up some capital controls. The
renminbi currency has grown in stature as a global reserve
currency, although in June China had a setback when the MSCI
index provider delayed inclusion of mainland China shares into
its flagship emerging markets index for the time being.
While emerging markets in the past suffered from a higher risk
profile than was typically the case in more developed countries,
Brexit and other political woes in Europe and the
US have changed perceptions, and prove how “antiquated” old
asset allocation approaches were, Cragg said.
Cragg said that his portfolios have a strong focus on equity
income, responding to clients’ needs, and that this area of the
equity market has produced the most growth for his business
recently. At the time of writing, assets under management across
his emerging market strategy are $1.65 billion.
The Emerging Markets Equity Income Fund (inception date, 29
June 2012) has returned 2.08 per cent since inception to
June 2016 whereas the index declined 0.47 per cent over
the same period. The single-largest holding in
percentage terms is China Mobile (2.45 per cent), followed by
China Petroleum & Chemical Corporation Class H (2.23 per cent);
the largest jurisdiction allocation is to Hong Kong, at 20.7 per
cent, against a benchmark of 20.69 per cent, followed by Taiwan
(16.25 per cent versus 12.07 per cent).