Brazil: The World’s Greatest Value Right Now?

 | Oct 03, 2014 01:30AM ET

From watching the action in the iShares MSCI Brazil ETF (ARCA:EWZ), you might think we were back in October of 2008 rather than 2014.  As of Wednesday’s close, EWZ had dropped a staggering 22% in less than a month.

The “reason,” if you can ever identify a reason for a drop of that size, is the growing probability that president Dilma Rousseff will win reelection  in this Sunday’s election.  Hopes had been building that Rousseff would lose to upstart Marina Silva, but the race is now too close to call and Rousseff appears to have the momentum.

So, what are we to make of this?  Is Dilma that bad?

Yes, Rousseff is a lousy president with a terrible understanding of basic economics.  But let’s look past the politics here.  The fact is that Brazilian stocks are wildly volatile, both on the upside and downside.

In a little over three months from late October of last year to early February of this year, EWZ dropped by about 27% before turning around and rallying by 42%.  The current 22% drop is significant in that it happened in the proverbial blink of an eye, but its magnitude is nothing special.  Over the past ten years, the Brazil ETF has had 11 instances where it dropped 20% or more.  And that included a period in which EWZ rose by a factor of five.

In other words, unless you have a stomach for volatility, you have no business buying a Brazil ETF.

So, after the recent rout, where does that leave us?  Is EWZ a basket of cheap bargain stocks, or is it value trap better left avoided?

Let’s play with the numbers a little.  As of Wednesday’s close, EWZ is nearly 60% below its 2008 high and nearly 50% below its highs of as recently as 2011.  Some of this decline is due to depreciation of the Brazilian real, which has lost 31% of its value relative to the dollar.  The real is now sitting close to its 2008 crisis lows.  Though the real is still slightly overvalued by the back-of-the-envelope calculations of The Economist’s Big Mac Index , I don’t see it falling much lower from these levels.  The U.S. dollar has been exceptionally strong  since the start of the third quarter on the assumption that the Fed will be raising rates soon. While that might matter vis-à-vis the euro or yen, I don’t buy the argument for high-interest-rate countries like Brazil.

Currency issues aside, EWZ is very attractively priced at a cyclically-adjusted price/earnings ratio (“CAPE”) of less than 10.  Now to be fair, the ten-year average includes the inflated earnings years of the mid-2000s commodities boom.  But then, it also includes the 2008 meltdown and global recession that followed.

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To keep this in context, U.S. stocks trade at a CAPE of 26, near the levels of major past market peaks.