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Iran is the 'single greatest growth spot in the world'

Daneshmand

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Iran is the 'single greatest growth spot in the world'
rtx22q7s.jpg

Stock market employees work at Tehran's Stock Exchange, Iran.


Tehran was up 25% in January. Have you invested yet?

Take a moment to consider just how dark the future is for economic growth worldwide. The slaughter in oil aside, real demand is collapsing at a rate never seen in the last half century, implied volatility across assets classes is exploding, and correlations are racing to one.

In the meantime, Japan has joined other industrialized nations declaring a negative interest rate policy—policy talk for “we have no hope left”—and the other shoe in securitized oil products has yet to drop. All the while, central bankers have been borrowing growth from the future via quantitative easing at a rate that is rational only if they hope to be out of office before anyone notices.

Even the Federal Reserve has begun to sheepishly ask U.S. banks how they would “handle” negative rates (hypothetically, of course). As the new reality slowly begins to dawn on those still holding public equities, the private equity market, home to the truly delusional valuations, is where the real pearl clutching is about to begin in the West. The question is no longer “what is my valuation?” but “how can I avoid losing half my assets?” There is only one place left in the world where doing so is possible: Tehran.

Even if the world wasn’t falling apart and the Tehran Stock Exchange (TSE) hadn’t rocketed 25% in the last month alone, the single greatest growth spot in the world still lies in Iran. Based on my first-hand observations of the daily trading activity over the last two years, I can easily deploy 1 billion USD equivalent without disrupting the public markets or significantly altering the liquidity profile. I also reasonably expect a 150% currency adjusted return in Tehran over the next 24 months. And unlike equity markets in the West, there are generations-worth of untapped private capital waiting to go public and a world hungry for stable yields.

All of this good news begs the obvious question: how to invest? Based on guidance issued by the Office of Foreign Asset Control (OFAC) in mid-January, Americans are limited to offshore vehicles and require a special license – no small hurdle, but not insurmountable. But for the rest of the world, the flood gates are wide open. Why wouldn’t Americans rush to take advantage of the investment opportunities too?

Some would mention that mythological “150 billion” released to Iran— a gross exaggeration orchestrated by the Republican Party and neoconservatives who are choking on a new world order no longer of their own design. The real number is 50 billion, and the “portion” that could fund terrorism, as Secretary Kerry pointed out, is no more surprising than the handful of American welfare recipients converting food stamps into cash to buy OxyContin. Every system has its imperfections, but in Iran the pros far outweigh the cons.

The hedge funds that will outperform in Iran will be the ones run by those who recognize real risk management lies less with variance and correlation but with policy and politics. There is a very different culture around investing in Iran that the West needs to prepare for. The typical openness most corporations have for investors is almost non-existent, and an indication of interest to invest isn’t a confirmation of a good value so much as cause for suspicion.

Nonetheless, I have found that once mutual trust, respect, and good intentions have been established, nothing is impossible. Those who take the time to live in Iran, learn the language, and truly understand the Iranian mindset are welcomed as peers no matter the color of their passport.

My singular focus—the focus of any investor—should lie with the non-traditional risks Iran poses and how things can go wrong rather than the extraordinary opportunity that the Iranian moment represents. A 100% return is fairly meaningless if you suddenly can’t get your cash out of the country because Iran is no longer connected to SWIFT. That risk, thankfully, is near zero. Snapback sanctions, should they occur, will not happen overnight. The international community, led by Europe, will likely signal well in advance of any shift in policy of that scale; the Iranians might take unilateral action to disconnect themselves, but this is equally unlikely because it would roll back generations of work establishing good will and trust at a time relations are just beginning to thaw.

The one major risk factor that keeps me up at night is the lack of tools available to the central bank to effect monetary policy in any significant way. The only other investor I have noticed echo the same concerns is in a recently issued research note by Sturgeon Capital. This is significant because the risk is very real that the tools and experience to tame interest rates during a time of explosive growth are not in place. As I wrote in Business Insider in September, bank savings rates remain in the 15% range. The challenge for the central bank is to push this rate lower to accommodate domestic growth—at the same time the world is buying Rials—is no small task.

The opportunity in Iran in both the public and private equity space remains a singular moment in history and, despite its uniqueness, is one that will not pass quickly. There are decades of growth ahead for this highly educated, energy independent, and entrepreneurial-focused nation that is also a rare beacon of stability in the Middle East. To be sure, there are problems—but there are problems in all states. There will be growing pains in Iran but slow, steady, and prudent stock selection will be rewarded with spectacular returns if, and only if, the known unknowns are managed with the attitude of mutual respect.
 
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A lot foreign investments are going to flock into Iran this year, you might experience a huge growth in 2016 despite low oil price.

Is there already a IMF prediction for 2016?
 
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A lot foreign investments are going to flock into Iran this year, you might experience a huge growth in 2016 despite low oil price.

Is there already a IMF prediction for 2016?
Predictions vary between 5.8 to %7 for 2016 and a few years afterward by different local and international centers...

The economist: %6.1(2016)
IMF: %5.8 (2016)
IMF: %6.7 (2017)
 
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I wanted to invest but I already lost money 3 times, twice in Tehran stock market and once in Dubai one, so I suck. But I check it everyday, take out my calculator, dream about the profit, and resist the temptation.
 
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What? Why this pessimism?

5.8% growth is not pessimistic. World growth is estimated by IMF at 3.4% in 2016. USA growth is estimated at 2.6%. Turkey is estimated at 3.6%.

From my side, I actually consider 5.8% too optimistic.
 
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Predictions vary between 5.8 to %7 for 2016 and a few years afterward by different local and international centers...

The economist: %6.1(2016)
IMF: %5.8 (2016)
IMF: %6.7 (2017)
Those are quite good figures.
 
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5.8% growth is not pessimistic. World growth is estimated by IMF at 3.4% in 2016. USA growth is estimated at 2.6%. Turkey is estimated at 3.6%.

From my side, I actually consider 5.8% too optimistic.
But too low for Iran ... we need 2 digits growth rate ...
 
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What? Why this pessimism?
Story short, Iran has short term advantages and disadvantages for coming 5 to 10 years.

I personally predict a growth like this for coming years and I explain why:

2016: %6
2017: %6
2018: %6.5 or %7
2019: %4
2020: %3.5
2021: %4.5
2022: %5.0
2023: %4.5 or %5.0

Growth Generators in next 10 years:

- Asaluyeh petrochemical mega projects that would pour as much as $50 billion of cash into economy each year after its full implementation which is about to happen in 2 years or even sooner (if taken by Khatam Al anbya contractor group)

- Highly invested fields of pharmaceuticals (a huge shift in medicine and medical equipment have seen lately and will be even more in couple of years) , chemical products (There is a considerable investment by Iranian private sector in different chemical industries), Nano products (hundreds of young private companies in this field will seek new markets) , industry (lots of foreign manufactures are already in Iran to build new factories) , Tourism (Lots of new hotels and agencies to be opened soon) will fruit better year after year.

- New surge of upgraded services due to get injected into Iranian service sector. The most important among these are construction (Maskane Mehr mega project will be finished in coupe of years generating billions of GDP), transport/transit (shipping, airbuses, etc) , higher public spending, more developed finance/banking sector (a new age for Iranian banking as Europeans are already here to re-volute), new marketing expansions (including e-commerce which is quite active in Iran already)

- A likely Water-Electricity asaluyeh will be built in Makran-Chabahar region... There are literally billions of dollars of Chinese and Russian money in form of new nuclear, thermal, renewable power plants which will also produce sweet water for Iranian central plains and coastal south eastern. These projects are huge... Imagine the scale of services will be created in according to these projects and their necessary infrastructure...

- Many yet-to-be-announced projects are underway in different sectors of Iranian economy

Possible Setbacks:

- Still a sick economic structure which needs a lot of modification if not revolutions...

- Ever changing governments that leave many productive projects futile due to change in policies from one president to another... The good thing is that the supreme leader got into some of the most strategic projects securing their fate for a long time...

- Very chaotic middle east with lots of unwanted pregnancies... No body knows what is going to happen in ME... It sure will affect Iranian economy as with other middle eastern economies...
 
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5.8% growth is not pessimistic. World growth is estimated by IMF at 3.4% in 2016. USA growth is estimated at 2.6%. Turkey is estimated at 3.6%.

From my side, I actually consider 5.8% too optimistic.

I consider myself as a great friend of Iran. I love the Iranian people more than some Iranian I met in Europe.
What I want to say is that I am not an anti-Iranian troll when I criticize specific Iranian policies.

One have to admit in this context that the growth figures for Iran are relatively bad (at least for the moment).

Compare the Iranian figures with the Turkish data please.

IMF 2016 Iran: 5,8 %
IMF 2016 Turkey: 4 %
(source: http://www.sabah.com.tr/ekonomi/2016/02/02/imf-turkiye-buyume-tahminini-acikladi-1454430003)

sak-2%20kopya.JPG

The difference in growth forecast is only 1.8 percent. This is simply not enough for Iran. If you look closer to the political, economic and geopolitical circumstances of the two countries, you will realize that the Iranian economy falls short of its potential.

Iran:
The sanctions were lifted, international investors are lining up, and the country is gaining recognition.

Turkey:
Trade war with Russia, millions of refugees in the country, the Iraqi market has slumped, the European market is stagnating, Greece remains in recession, war in the southeast etc.

I'm not praising Turkey. Our economic development performance is terrible too. But despite the poorer state of the Turkish economy, the difference is minimal between these two neighboring countries.

Why?

First of all, the main reasons are nepotism, subsidy policy and mismanagement in Iran. I'll give you an example: The Revolutionary Guards control a large part of the Iranian economy. They monopolize the economic activity in the country and prevent competition to secure their sinecures. They crush the private companies with their economic hegemony and suppress innovation. This then lead the Iranian central government to strongly intervene in the economy. Thereby, the Revolutionary Guards acquire much more political influence on the economy and the state. A vicious circle.

That's one reason, why Iran must finally become a free market economy, otherwise the country will never achieve the prosperity level of other Gulf states.
Index of Economic Freedom

p0vE4UE.png


The Middle East needs a prosperous Iran for its own sake.
 
.
I consider myself as a great friend of Iran. I love the Iranian people more than some Iranian I met in Europe.
What I want to say is that I am not an anti-Iranian troll when I criticize specific Iranian policies.

One have to admit in this context that the growth figures for Iran are relatively bad (at least for the moment).

Compare the Iranian figures with the Turkish data please.

IMF 2016 Iran: 5,8 %
IMF 2016 Turkey: 4 %
(source: http://www.sabah.com.tr/ekonomi/2016/02/02/imf-turkiye-buyume-tahminini-acikladi-1454430003)

sak-2%20kopya.JPG

The difference in growth forecast is only 1.8 percent. This is simply not enough for Iran. If you look closer to the political, economic and geopolitical circumstances of the two countries, you will realize that the Iranian economy falls short of its potential.

Iran:
The sanctions were lifted, international investors are lining up, and the country is gaining recognition.

Turkey:
Trade war with Russia, millions of refugees in the country, the Iraqi market has slumped, the European market is stagnating, Greece remains in recession, war in the southeast etc.

I'm not praising Turkey. Our economic development performance is terrible too. But despite the poorer state of the Turkish economy, the difference is minimal between these two neighboring countries.

Why?

First of all, the main reasons are nepotism, subsidy policy and mismanagement in Iran. I'll give you an example: The Revolutionary Guards control a large part of the Iranian economy. They monopolize the economic activity in the country and prevent competition to secure their sinecures. They crush the private companies with their economic hegemony and suppress innovation. This then lead the Iranian central government to strongly intervene in the economy. Thereby, the Revolutionary Guards acquire much more political influence on the economy and the state. A vicious circle.

That's one reason, why Iran must finally become a free market economy, otherwise the country will never achieve the prosperity level of other Gulf states.
Index of Economic Freedom

p0vE4UE.png


The Middle East needs a prosperous Iran for its own sake.
Talking from this point of view you are right but nevertheless 5.8% is a relative good number, give it a couple years till investors trust into Iranian economy, the only criteria is that Iran holds its promises and doesnt go to confrontation with west, Investors need safety, nobody wants to burn his money or he will just invest somewhere else.
 
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