Emerging mkts on cusp of next big bull run: Mark Mobius
Published on Mon, Apr 27, 2009 at 17:40 , Updated at Tue, Apr 28, 2009 at 12:29
Source : CNBC-TV18
Mark Mobius, Managing Director of Templeton, also christened as emerging market guru, signaled
it a few weeks back, in early March, when the world was collapsing or
the world of equities was collapsing. That time he said he saw great
value in emerging markets and many global equity markets may see a very
good rebound. Indeed the rebound has come.
In
an exclusive interview with CNBC-TV18's Udayan Mukherjee, Mark Mobius
said that market is currently building a base for the next big bull
rally, which can be clearly seen “if you look at the valuations, flows
of funds, the amount of money being printed not only by the United States
but also by the governments around the world. If you look at money
supply ....as soon as the velocity of that money increases then you
will have a bull market in a big way,” Mobius said, adding that he sees
a retest of the lows seen in October but those lows won't be broken.
The
worst for the markets is over, Mobius said. “The money supply is
increasing in a fast pace, inflation is coming down and with that
interest rates are coming down. All of these factors have a hand to
play in pushing stock market prices up.”
Here is a verbatim transcript of the exclusive interview with Mark Mobius on CNBC-TV18.
Q: Are we still in a bear market or do you think we have turned the corner?
A: I
think what we are doing now is building a base for the next big bull
market. You’ll notice that the pricing is moving up and down in a
relatively large channel and that channel has a upward slope. So if you
look at the valuations, flows of funds, the amount of money being
printed by not only the US
but the governments around the world. If you look at money supply going
up as soon as the velocity of that money increases then you will have a
bull market in a big way. But right now we are building a base.
If
you look at the difference from the absolute bottom in October, we are
up about 20% and in some cases we are up more than 50% or 60% in some
of the emerging markets around the world. So you might say if you
define a bull market as being over 20% increase, we are already in a
bull market in some places. But for the true long-term bull market we
will have to wait a little longer but the base is being built right
now.
Q: Do
you think the worst of the bear market is over though from a pricing
point of view? Do you think we saw the most of the price destruction in
the last couple of big falls on October and March or do you fear in
this consolidation phase those lows could be retested or even violated?
A: I
don’t think they will be violated. I think they might be tested, but it
would be part of this base building process that I mentioned. I think
the worst is over.
Q: So you are not ruling out the possibility of the S&P in the US for example going back and retesting those 666-667 kind of levels?
A: The
exact level is impossible to give. No one knows where we will be at any
particular time but what I am saying is that the valuations look very
attractive not only in India
but in other parts of the world. The money supply is increasing in a
fast pace, inflation is coming down and with that interest rates are
coming down. All of these factors have a hand to play in pushing stock
market prices up.
Q: Purely in definitional terms, how would you describe the rally that we have seen from the bottom of the 9th
of March? Some people are calling it a bear market rally, no more than
that. Others believe that is something more than that. How would you
define it – what we have seen so far?
A:
I wouldn’t say that it's a bear market rally, I would say that we are
now at the cusp of a new bull run for emerging markets at least, I
can’t speak for the developed countries, but for emerging markets at
least we are seeing that. The fundamentals are very good and the
foreign reserves are much higher than the developed countries. The debt
to GDP ratio too is lower than the developed countries. So, all of
these factors point to a very optimistic scenario for the markets.
Q: Has
this rally left out a lot of investors because there was such a lot of
disbelief at the first part of March. Do you think a lot of global
investors have managed to participate in this rally or is there a
general left out feeling of people on the sidelines?
A:
I think there's a general feeling of being left out. I think many of
the global investors are heavy in cash. If you talk to money managers
and look at their portfolio then you can see that they have a lot of
cash, in some cases they have as much as 90% in cash when we look at
the hedge funds operators. So there is a lot of cash waiting for the
time when they want to come back in. If you look the spread between
emerging market's debt and US treasuries, you will see that it’s still
quite high. It’s about 7.5%.
That
has to come down and it’s beginning to come down before the markets
really come up in a way that they were previously. So everyone is very
cautious. If you pickup the newspapers you will read a lot of bad news.
People are concerned and therefore they don’t participate and then when
they see market go up by 20-30% as I mentioned, then they feel a little
disappointed that they didn’t participate. But then they say well this
is just a bear market rally and I will wait till it comes back again.
So that is the psychology we are facing right now and the big
international investors have not really come back.
Q: Do
you think the market will give them an opportunity? Last few days, the
investors that we have been speaking to are all saying we would like to
buy this market but on declines, on dips, not at current levels because
it has run up quite a bit. Do you think that opportunity will be given
by the market to them, 15-20% dip for them to re-enter and to deploy
the cash that they are sitting on?
A:
Yes, I think for some stocks that will certainly be the case and as I
mentioned with this base building you are going to have this
volatility, one day you will have bad news come in and there will be an
opportunity to come back in again. So this doesn’t necessarily have to
be a rush, but I would say that people have got to be prepared to put
some money in the markets because currencies are not really the place
you want to be right now, with interest rates coming down at the rate
they are. Some emerging market bonds are quite interesting rite now.
That would be another area. But I would say to be invested now is very
important.
Q: At
some point this year do you see the possibility of any kind of a buying
panic for people who are not exposed adequately to equities or
commodities as an asset class who have been very risk averse – do you
see that possibility at all?
A:
Definitely there is that possibility. The problem that managers have
faced including ourselves was that in October and November when we
wanted to buy we couldn’t because you had redemptions coming out of the
funds. Net redemptions continued from October-November, December and a
little bit of January, now it’s turned positive. But in the meantime
you have seen this move up in the markets. So it’s very difficult for
money managers if they having redemptions and that true across the
board. Now it’s changing and you are getting a trickle of money coming
in but still it’s certainly not a normal situation that we would see
where people would really want to put money to work. So it’s going to
take time for this confidence to return.
Q: Just
want your thoughts on how much time it would take to go through this
base building period, we have seen few months of this volatility within
a channel as you described, by when do you think we will be done
spending time in this channel, the base would be built and we could
actually firmly start our way into the next bull market?
A: I
would say that would be before the end of this year. This process will
have been completed and then you will have the move up. But you have to
be careful because it may creep up on us and then if you get big
increases of 30-50-60%, then things can no longer be cheap,
particularly in view of the fact that earnings has slowed down in so
many companies. So you have got to really take an opportunity when the
prices are down.
Q: Are you then saying to just read between the lines that 2010 calendar could actually be a bull market year for the equities?
A: I
think it could very well be with the amount of money that’s floating
around in cash, there could definitely be another bull market run. We
must remember these days things move very quickly with communications
the way it is and money movements the way they are, you could find bull
market upon us very soon.
Q: What are you doing now yourself after this rally that you described 20% in the US
and money markets 40-50%? At current valuations given earnings, are you
taking some profits off the table or are you remaining invested for
much bigger gains during the year?
A:
We are still quite cheap, we are still finding most of the stocks and
in fact our portfolios have an average price to earnings ratio of less
than 10, price to book value of less than 1.5 and in many cases less
than one and dividend yields average of about 4%. So you can’t say that
this is expensive. It’s quite reasonably priced and that’s the reason
why we want to be fully invested. So any money we get in, we
immediately put it to work.
Q: There has been a lot of talk last year about decoupling between emerging markets and the US
market. In the current rally of the last few weeks, most markets have
moved pretty much in sync. Do you think in calendar year 2009 as we go
along, you could see some signs of decoupling between these markets? Do
you think it is time to revisit that old decoupling debate?
A:
I don’t think you can have total decoupling because globalisation is
with us. Communications are so fast these days that everyone is
affected by everyone else. But it doesn’t mean that everybody has to go
down together and you have seen what's happening in emerging market
since October — we are now up about 20%. So it is definitely a
different story but decoupling is not really a viable concept.
Q: Fair enough. Decoupling may not be a viable concept but you are bullish on emerging markets more than you seem to be in the US.
How would you approach this whole BRIC universe? That was the raging
theme in 2007 and 2008, it sort of fell off after the big correction
but what would you back in the BRIC universe now?
A: First, the opportunities — China obviously, because they are growing at incredible pace compared to other countries. I was in China
yesterday in Shenzhen and it is amazing to see the way these people are
working, celebrating, playing. They are just so active and so many
things are happening. So China is number one.
Number two is India,
again growing at a very fast pace. We are expecting 4-5% this year and
these two countries, don’t forget, are over a billion people. So per
capita income is moving up, consumption is going up. Those are the two
hotspots I would say.
After that I would say Brazil is very important for us and then believe it or not, Russia. Russia has been beaten down but we believe they are going to come back and they are going to be quite exciting.
Q: The recovery that you just spoke about across many of these markets like China, Russia – do you think they are leading some kind of a definite economic recovery?
A: That’s right because as you know the stock market leads and then the economy follows. China
had their big downturn when there was knowledge in the market that the
economies would slow down. Now it is looking to the next year recovery,
so we are seeing a very good market in these countries.
Q: But what about the developed markets like the US?
Would you say the same that stock market turnarounds are heralding some
kind of an economic turnaround or would you continue to be underweight
as an asset class on developed market equities like the US market for example?
A:
There are very good opportunities in the US in companies that have
exposure to emerging markets because emerging markets are the
high-growth areas and if you have an American company that has
exposure, good corporate governance, experienced management, global
coverage then those are the companies you want to look at. And there
are many of them as you know. So I wouldn’t give up on the US and in
fact we’d looked at US companies and unfortunately we are restricted
for our emerging markets funds to go into companies that have at least
50% of their earnings in emerging markets.
Q: What about Europe – where do you stand on that?
A: Western Europe
is the same thing. There are some companies — in fact, we’ve invested
in a Swedish company that’s the biggest cosmetics company in Russia — so you have lots of companies that you can look at in the European market but again there are so many other opportunities in Eastern Europe, we just want to stick there.
Q:
Let me just come back to that BRIC point once again because the hope in
this part of the world is that it is China where people had become
excessively pessimistic about but that is the one which will lead a
recovery across Asian markets and will be the first to recover this
year as well. Do you subscribe to that theory?
A:
Exactly. You’re seeing numbers all over the place but I personally
think their target of 8% — I would 7% to be conservative — but from
what I see they are going to be able to achieve that.
Q:
Equally this – there is so much talk going around about the kind of
stimulus package that China has unleashed which dwarfs anything that we
are seeing out of India and of course across many developed markets as
well and the construct now seems to be that or the story now seems to
be that, that is the one which will lead to a big turnaround in the
region?
A:
That’s an interesting story because Shenzhen where I was just yesterday
and I saw things really booming there, what's happened is that of
course 10 million workers went home for Chinese New Year, now about 8
million have come back – we are talking about a quarter of million
unemployed in that area.
In the context of the billion people, that’s not very much and of course everything in China
is on a big scale. But we haven’t seen the unrest that you would
expect. It is pretty disciplined. It doesn’t mean that you don’t have
strikes and demonstrations. Of course, that’s going on all the time but
[there is] no major problem in that regard and the government is moving
very fast.
They
are pumping money into the economy at a rapid rate. They have their own
stimulus programme, over USD 500 billion is being spent, banks are
lending very rapidly, the lending amounts of the banks are doing are
very high now. So I think they are going to be moving along and
achieving those growth rates.
Q: It is not just China.
The whole hope on which the global markets seem to be rising now is
that we haven’t seen this kind of coordinated government policy action
in any crisis in the past and people are sort of betting on that, that
the new Geithner plan, the kind of money which is being thrown into the
global markets that will eventually work out. Where do you stand on
that hypothesis? Do you think this kind of government policy action
will eventually lead markets out of their depression?
A: As far as I see, money supply is being pumped into economies around the world — not only in the US but also China, India,
you name the country, they are pumping money. Why do they feel
comfortable doing that because interest rates are coming down and
inflation rates are coming down. So they feel comfortable making these
moves to pump money into the economies. In the emerging markets,
foreign exchange reserves are at all-time highs, the debt to GDP ratio
is very low in these countries. So they’re able to pump money in. The
fear and I think the big problem that we could have going forward is
protectionism.
If
Europe, US become protectionists, all bets are off and that would be a
bad thing not only for the US and Europe but of course for emerging
markets and I am not just talking about exports, I am talking about
investment, trade flows, money flows back and forth. This is very
important to continue in open society and open trade and investment
situation.
Edited by atulbull - 28/Apr/2009 at 5:11pm