Emerging Markets
Barings Smiles On Emerging Equities, Says Tailwinds Still Positive

There are plenty of reasons to remain cheerful - with some caveats - about equities and emerging market equities in particular, the firm says.
In this article, the global head of equities at asset management house Barings, Ghadir Cooper, discusses the recent equity market volatility and the continued attraction of emerging markets, and also sheds light on how the firm's team thinks about potentially market-moving developments like the emergence of cryptocurrencies and the recent change in US Federal Reserve leadership. The editors of this news service are happy to share these views and have published other commentaries on investments from firms across the world. To add your voice, email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com
Can you start by telling us how today’s equity market
conditions are similar to or different than those you’ve
witnessed in the past?
Our equity team takes a long-term approach to investing and many
of us have been investing actively for decades through the course
of many cycles - so we have certainly witnessed quite a bit of
change. One such change has been the effect of passive investing
on market dynamics. This has firmed our belief in the value of
active investing; markets remain inefficient and we believe that
active management is the most effective approach to capitalize on
these inefficiencies, as we seek to deliver superior
risk-adjusted returns compared with benchmark (passive) investing
over time.
This is particularly relevant now as correlations between and
within markets have reduced substantially since their recent peak
in 2016. This means that the opportunity for active managers to
add value increases.
We are entering a period where central banks globally are
withdrawing stimulus in a measured fashion and that, from time to
time, can cause some anxiety in markets. However, ultimately we
believe that equity returns are a reflection of the health of the
corporate sector where earnings are still on an upward trend and
valuations - especially in emerging markets - are not stretched
versus the growth potential.
The backdrop for equities generally remains fundamentally
supported, in our view. Specifically, the economic environment
continues to be characterised by synchronized global growth, a
corporate earnings recovery in emerging markets and tailwinds in
developed markets including the continued European recovery and
US tax reforms. We are finding particular opportunities among
international companies, smaller capitalization companies and
emerging markets.
We are active investors in equity markets with a strong and
experienced team of 63 dedicated equity investment professionals.
Our fundamental research forms the cornerstone of our investment
process. We take a longer-term (five-year) view as we aim to
identify unrecognised growth opportunities for our clients. As
such, when we encounter periods of volatility as we have
recently, we believe we are particularly well-positioned to put
such short-term price movements into the proper context,
remaining true to our proven and disciplined investment process
as we seek superior risk-adjusted returns for our clients.
Emerging markets were some of the strongest performers
among global stock markets last year. What are some changes that
you noticed in emerging markets (if any) during 2017 and what is
your outlook for emerging markets this year?
We remain constructive - investor appetite for emerging markets
equities has strengthened after several challenging years. This
has been driven by improved fundamentals, a notably stronger
earnings outlook - which we believe is sustainable given the
economic cycle - and attractive valuations. We believe these
trends will be sustained and support a continued upturn for the
asset class. A further potential tailwind may come from investors
increasing their allocations to the asset class, which are
currently low by historical standards. We discussed these trends
in detail in our recent Viewpoint, A New Dawn for Emerging
Markets Equities.
Emerging markets also continue to evolve. Twenty years ago, there
was a very heavy sector concentration in resource companies and
large infrastructure providers, which were dominated by telecoms
and utility companies. The EM equity universe is now very
different and includes more “new economy” companies, including
world-leading technology providers.
And while emerging markets today encompass a vast array of
companies, they attract significantly less sell-side analyst
research coverage than developed markets. This inevitably leads
to less accurate earnings forecasting and consequently mispriced
assets. This is where Barings has an advantage as well-resourced,
active managers. Our dedicated emerging market equity team is 32
people strong with an average of 14 years of experience. The
bottom-up analysis that this team conducts every day allows us -
we believe - to unearth attractive opportunities for our
clients.
Equity market volatility has been surprisingly low in
recent years as prices have appreciated. Do you think the
February volatility flare-up is a sign of things to come or is
volatility more likely to be muted?
We believe the outlook remains supportive for equity markets;
however, potential headwinds also exist. A return to wage growth
is coinciding with a recovery in capital expenditure and rising
inflation expectations. This, together with some measured
withdrawal of stimulus from central banks globally, created the
conditions for some volatility and profit taking at the start of
February.
In such an environment, we would expect some companies to fare
better than others with the potential for some sectors and
companies to be more exposed to margin pressures. On the other
hand, there will also be companies that continue to benefit from
the structural and cyclical trends in place.
Sell-offs like the one witnessed in early February can provide
opportunities for long-term active investors. At Barings, we very
much take a long-term approach to identifying areas of
unrecognized growth. When we see equity prices become decoupled
from their underlying fundamental values during bouts of market
volatility like the recent one, we remain true to our process and
aim to be as objective as possible. By relying on fundamental
analysis, longer-term forecasts than many of our peers and
considering other relevant factors like ESG, we believe we can
truly add value for our investors—and this is even more true
during periods of market volatility.
We know that the strong performance of the so-called
FAANG stocks (Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix, and Alphabet’s
Google) has been a critical driver, especially of US stock
returns recently. What sectors look poised for strong performance
in the years ahead?
Certainly the idea of disruptive platform dynamics, which FAANG
plays into, has been an area where we have found strong bottom-up
investment ideas. 2017 was a year where the FAANG companies’
powerful platforms in areas such as e-commerce, advertising and
IT infrastructure became more apparent to investors. We see this
continuing in 2018, albeit with more nuances around evolving
pressures from regulators and governments and the investments the
companies need to make in order to adapt.
Looking beyond FAANG and leveraging the fundamental analysis of
our specialist global research team, we see the software sector
in particular as an area with a growing number of companies
exhibiting similar platform dynamics in how they compete and
grow.
Outside of technology, we are able to look at these structural
changes taking place and identify a far wider range of potential
investments across different market capitalizations, regions and
sectors. This means an ever closer collaboration between our
specialist sector research teams and the specialist regional
teams to identify the most attractive opportunities on a
fundamental, bottom-up basis.
With the jury still out on the long-term viability of
crypto-currencies, can you comment on the potential impacts for
equity investors from cryptocurrencies and block chain technology
more broadly?
The premise behind the emergence of the Bitcoin cryptocurrency was the
desire to build a payment system that was both anonymous and not
reliant on a central authority to manage that currency. This
initiative grew in popularity after the global financial crisis.
The recent volatility in the value of Bitcoin we see as diverting
attention from the greater impact of the building of a system
where “trust” is not required, and therefore does not need a
middleman.
The real innovation has been the use of blockchain technology to
create an immutable and distributed ledger of ownership of
assets. The cryptocurrency (Bitcoin, Ether, Ripple, etc.)
associated to any blockchain is useful as a label to attach
ownership of an asset to a person/ company, and then to track
that asset as it is traded over time.
This idea is now being applied to a huge variety of processes,
including insurance contracts, diamond trading and even digital
photography royalties. Just focusing on the global banking
industry, it is easy to identify uses for block chains where
complexity and frictions exist, which add cost and slow down
transactions; an example would be the processing of trade finance
contracts. Any business that profits from transactional
complexity and friction should be wary of disruption from block
chain based alternatives.
Blockchain is one
example of a disruptive technology that is rapidly reshaping
longstanding accepted practices in large markets, but there are
many others just as impactful. Advances in artificial
intelligence have accelerated and are becoming embedded into the
production of services and products we use every single day at
home and work, including everything from social media feeds to
how your IT helpdesk prevents equipment failures; autonomous
vehicles will dramatically change approaches to city planning
with respect to municipal transport and real estate; robotics,
and more broadly, automation can have fundamental effects on the
industrial complex and advance manufacturing capabilities across
the world.
The point of inflection for technology to deliver on the promise
of significant productivity improvements is getting ever closer.
We are fortunate to have sector teams that are able to look at
disruptive technologies and identify not only the threats but
also the opportunities that innovation has to offer.
With the recent change in leadership atop the US Federal
reserve and rates appearing to be on the rise, can you discuss
how you factor higher rates into your analysis?
Fed policy is dictated by fostering economic growth in a stable
inflation environment and so it seems unlikely that Chairman
Powell’s appointment in itself will have any meaningful impact on
markets.
As equity investors, with a bottom-up approach and long research
outlook, we take into account the macroeconomic conditions that a
company operates in through our in-house calculated cost of
equity.
The cost of equity is the minimum rate of return demanded by
equity investors for committed capital. This cost of capital
varies from market to market, and is dependent on economic and
monetary as well as market conditions. This rate is required by
equity investors to compensate for the risk of owning a share of
a company versus another investment they may otherwise make.
So any change in macro conditions, including the reason for the
changes in interest rate outlook, get incorporated seamlessly by
our analysts and fund managers in their fundamental analysis.
This affects our in-house earnings forecasts and also our
valuation of the company through the use of an appropriate cost
of equity.
Any final takeaways?
As a long-term investor, who has seen many economic cycles, we
believe investors should focus on fundamentals as a driver for
returns.
We believe that companies’ share prices over time reflect their
earnings potential and as long as they are not overpriced, growth
is a powerful determinant of future returns for the level of risk
taken.