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Hunt for Returns Reaches Pakistan

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Hunt for Returns Reaches Pakistan
Since March, more than $67 billion has poured into a group of 30 emerging markets

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The Karachi Stock Exchange PHOTO: ASIM HAFEEZ/BLOOMBERG NEWS
By
MIA LAMAR And

CAROLYN CUI

Ross Teverson, head of emerging-market strategy at $49 billion money manager Jupiter Asset Management, has a new star pick: Pakistan.

The country wasn’t even considered an emerging market when he decided to invest. Until earlier this summer, it was a rung lower—a “frontier” market, where stocks are notoriously hard to trade and the political climate is tumultuous. And yet, the benchmark KSE-100 stock index is up 20% in dollar terms this year, Exhibit A in how far global investors are willing to go for returns these days.

Sluggish growth in developed economies has prompted central banks to push interest rates down to zero and beyond, wiping out yields on government debt and sending investors into all sorts of fringe or previously unloved markets such as Pakistan’s.

By estimates, since March more than $67 billion has poured into a group of 30 emerging markets tracked by the Institute of International Finance. That number doesn’t include money heading to markets such as China and Russia, where information on foreign buying is limited.

“Investors have had to go further down the risk spectrum,” said Supriya Menon, senior multiasset strategist at $153 billion money manager Pictet Asset Management.

Alex Muromcew, who manages the TIAA Emerging Markets Equity Fund, has been increasing his fund’s exposure to Peru, a fringe investment even among emerging-market specialists. The country has attracted attention with a new president who is seen as market friendly. Stocks there are up 56% this year in dollar terms.

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Bond prices in Ecuador have rallied 27% this year, despite an energy-price slump that has cut revenue for the oil exporter. Hungary’s stock market is up 16%, beating most European bourses, as investors bet that falling inflation will allow the central bank to ease monetary policy.

Interest is even high in junk-rated Sri Lanka, which reached a deal with the International Monetary Fund in April to stave off a financial crisis. Foreigners have boosted their holdings of Sri Lanka’s local-currency government debt for six straight weeks, according to HSBC Holdings PLC.

Over a single week in July, foreign investors poured more than $5.5 billion into Indonesia, India and five other major emerging stock and bond markets tracked by the Institute of International Finance, the biggest one-week influx of cash in 15 months. Emerging-market debt funds drew a record $14 billion in the four weeks ended July 27, according to fund tracker EPFR Global.


There are limits to how much money these markets can absorb, and analysts warn that investors have probably underestimated the risks. Many emerging economies still rely heavily on commodity exports, making them vulnerable to continued weakness in global growth. Some investors might find it hard to find the exits if markets take a tumultuous turn.

“They might find liquidity to be an issue in emerging markets when there is a need to sell,” said Sean Ryan, senior analyst at MPI, a global provider of quantitative research and risk analytics.

Emerging-market stocks and local-currency bonds sustained losses for three consecutive years between 2013 and 2015, as investors pulled out billions of dollars. The MSCI EM index fell 25% over that period, compared with a 52.6% gain for the S&P 500 index. TheJ.P. Morgan Global Bond Index Emerging Markets Diversified lost 27%, while U.S. Treasury bonds rose 3.4%.

Peru’s $109 billion stock market is among the most volatile in all emerging markets. During the past three years, the market lost nearly half of its value, according to MSCIInc.

Bond investors also have to wrestle with deteriorating credit quality. There have been 19 defaults in emerging countries this year, up from 15 at the same time last year, according to S&P Global Ratings. Nearly one-third of all emerging-market issuers are at the risk of being downgraded.

But an easing of concerns about China’s economic slowdown, along with a rebound for commodity prices from their lows early this year, has helped encourage the return to riskier markets. Analysts and investors widely say they expect inflows to continue.

“Emerging markets have been broadly out of favor with global investors for the better part of four years,” said Mr. Teverson, whose investment in Pakistan helped his fund gain 17% this year through June. “When you have seen an asset class out of favor for so long and you see valuations so low, that inflow can be sustained for a long period.”

Asia, long snubbed by global investors, has been a big winner. The region has accounted for more than half of the emerging-market influx since March, according to the Institute of International Finance.

Foreign ownership of government bonds in Indonesia—where benchmark yields are hovering around 7%—has reached almost 40%, a 15-month peak. That comes although S&P Global Ratings stuck by its below-investment-grade—or junk—rating on the country in June, citing a population that is still relatively poor and a heavily indebted corporate sector.

In late July, Chinese property developer Greenland Hong Kong Holdings issued $450 million in three-year bonds yielding 4.125%, a half-percentage point below where the junk-rated company initially marketed the bonds and just 3.3 percentage points more than three-year U.S. Treasury notes.

Pacific Investment Management Co., the world’s biggest bond-fund manager, has done well this year investing in “out of consensus” countries such as Sri Lanka, according toLuke Spajic, who oversees the firm’s emerging-market investments in Asia. He warned, however, that risks such as a sharp slide in oil prices could send investors fleeing again.

“Everything could change on a dime,” Mr. Spajic said.

http://www.wsj.com/articles/hunt-for-returns-reaches-pakistan-1470032247
 
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Pakistan emerging economy is attracting global funds managers: UK Report
Posted By: News Deskon: August 05, 2016
Email
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WASHINGTON (APP): Sluggish growth in developed economies are pushing global fund managers to look for emerging markets like Pakistan, whose stock markets are among the best performance in recent years.

Jupiter Asset Management, a UK-based management group is one of such global fund managers which has picked Pakistan for investment and have garnered healthy returns.

Following promising economic performance and upward trajectory in growth in recent years, Pakistan was upgraded to Emerging Markets status by MSCI Emerging Markets Index in June, a move analysts say will help the country attract much-needed foreign investment.

However, when Ross Teverson, head of emerging-market strategy at $49 billion money manager Jupiter Asset Management decided to invest in Pakistan even when it wasn’t considered an emerging market.

Despite the fact that stocks are ‘hard’ to trade, the benchmark KSE-100 stock index is up 20 percent in dollar terms this year, according to a report by Wall Street Journal.

Slow growth in developed economies has caused central banks to cut interest rates which have made government debt less attractive for investment. In face of such developments, investors are looking for destinations like Pakistan to invest.

“Emerging markets have been broadly out of favour with global investors for the better part of four years,” Mr. Teverson of Jupiter Asset Management was quoted as saying by the WSJ report, whose investment in Pakistan helped his fund gain 17 percent this year through June.

“When you have seen an asset class out of favour for so long and you see valuations so low, that inflow can be sustained for a long period.”

International lending agencies including IMF and the World Bank have praised the government for stabilizing the country’s economy by undertaking a series of reforms in various sectors.

IMF recently praised commitment of Pakistan’s government to strengthen country’s fiscal position, saying the economic recovery and macroeconomic stability has further receded short-term vulnerabilities.

IMF’s Executive Board in June approved the disbursement of $501 million out of $6.6 billion loan secured in 2013 after a record 11th successful review of Pakistan’s economic performance under the 3-year Extended Fund Facility program.

Approving the installment, the IMF said that Pakistan’s economic recovery has gradually strengthened and short-term vulnerabilities have further receded as a result of improved macroeconomic stability and progress.

He praised the government for its commitment to the fiscal consolidation, saying the authorities are on track to achieve their program’s end-year fiscal targets, and their commitment to continue with gradual fiscal consolidation in FY2016/17 is welcome.

Also in June, the World Bank approved $1.02 billion economic package to push economic reforms.


https://timesofislamabad.com/pakist...g-global-funds-managers-uk-report/2016/08/05/
 
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Very glad to see the world taking notice of the PSE. The Wall Street Journal discussing it is really good news. The return it's currently providing to investors is phenomenal. Hopefully this will lead investors to also take note of Pakistan's economy at large, which is growing at healthy rate itself.
 
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What is the stock ticker for buying the Pakistani stock I heard recently that the stock was Upgraded due positive outlook of trade in Pakistan after Pakistan - China business venture
 
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Pakistan emerging economy is attracting global funds managers: UK Report
Posted By: News Deskon: August 05, 2016


I posted all this stuff three years ago and everyone on here was bit*ching about how I was delusional and that nothing was going to happen to Pakistan so drastically. Indians and Pakistanis alike, all had "issues" with my posts on writing bullshiit growth paradigm.

Well, the results are here aren't they :lol: :enjoy:. I write with integrity and 100% credibility or I keep my mouth shut. In the coming years, now watch how billions worth of manufacturing and technology jobs will be moving to Pakistan. Along with that, expect Samsung, LG and a few other power houses to start building their products inside Pakistan. Also watch the Car manufacturing, Audi, Ford, Renault and a few others are wanting to setup manufacturing inside Pakistan. They might start from dealership network first, but they will be doing JV's to build and sell cars there.

Also, your stock market has already tripled. Well, expect to see it reach 5 times the growth by the end of 2018, compared to the original size from 2014!! I hope the sane heads will prevail and no stupidity on political and other fronts is encountered. There are many new "Dubai's" are in making inside Pakistan so political stability and ZERO terrorism is a must to continue with such high powered growth.

Hunt for Returns Reaches Pakistan
Since March, more than $67 billion has poured into a group of 30 emerging markets

This article is very misleading and biased. There is no "hunt" for returns. This is pure investment. A growing economy offers tremendous potential so the returns are obviously there. But what makes an investor invest into a country is their political stability, industry and economic situation and long term progress. No one puts their money on a losing horse.

Not to mention, the US stock market has been running the highest for a while. So there are plenty of returns there too, and in dollars, not rupees. Its the policies built by the government of Pakistan and India, and others, that are making investors invest, knowing the market will favor their investments.

Here's a link to US markets closing ATH (as known as "ALL TIME HIGH"). So there is no crash in the US that investors are "forced" to invest into Pakistan. The article sounds idiotic to say the least.

http://www.cnbc.com/2016/08/05/us-markets.html

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/do...d-high-as-earnings-season-roars-on-2016-07-18
 
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