Making Necessary Distinctions

 | Jan 04, 2016 12:43AM ET

A recent Neuberger Berman analysis, by Conrad A. Saldanha, makes the case that the emerging markets as an asset class have hit their bottom and are poised for growth.

Of course Saldanha understands that since the “overall asset class” is such a huge one – half of global production –different parts thereof, both between and within the nations involved, have to be the subject of bottom-up scrutiny. For example, investors should be cautious about including in their portfolios the issuances of exporters headquartered in EM nations, especially those who are exporting commodities into a very competitive world market. Neuberger Berman’s “preference” is for those EM sectors and businesses with a domestic focus.

Also, the report understands that for two countries in particular, India and Indonesia, gains from the euphoria that a change in leadership can produce have already been realized. Indonesia elected Joko Widodo in July 2014, and he was widely seen in the investment world as a breath of fresh air entering into a room where the air has been very stale for decades. Likewise, in the elections that autumn, India gave a mandate to the Bharatiya Janata Party and to Narenda Modi. The new leadership in India in the year plus since the election has, as was expected, been more friendly to foreign investors than was the old.

But in both cases, India’s and Indonesia’s, the euphoria is behind us. Investors must now adjust “to the reality that change is tougher to implement in large democracies.” Hell, and heaven, both reside in the difficult details of implementation.

Look for the Buyers of Commodities

The present depressed commodity prices spell continued trouble for those companies that export said commodities, but they also spell opportunity for those that import and make use of them. For commodity importing markets in the EM world, “inflation and fiscal balance sheets have improved, and both manufacturers and consumers have benefitted from lower input costs.”

China, the source of much of the bad news in recent months, may be poised to become a source of good news, because it has been executing a (painful but necessary) shift from its dependence on fixed-asset investment to a greater focus on consumption. This will create more long-term investment opportunities in domestically oriented businesses. Present low valuations, along with “stabilization and more sanguine sentiment could drive upside for bottom-up investors in various niche areas.”