What Keeps Us Bullish?

 | Apr 21, 2019 03:57AM ET

Here’s what emerging markets need to see in order for 2019 to be their year to shine:

  • Growth accelerating after the deceleration in global growth that occurred in the latter part of 2018
  • Continued stimulus from the Chinese government that bears fruit in improving Chinese economic data, since Chinese demand is a key driver for many of Asia’s developing economies in particular
  • A majority of central banks worldwide, in both developed and emerging markets, either easing financial conditions in their respective countries, or at least holding steady, and communicating their intention to help their economies and their markets
  • A sideways-to-lower U.S. dollar
  • Reasonable forward valuations in emerging markets

As we often say, markets are discounting mechanisms. We believe that markets are in the process of pricing in the elements that emerging markets need, and that as the year progresses and the data unfold that confirm these developments, markets can rally further -- not just in emerging markets, but in the United States, and to some extent, perhaps even in Europe (although we are not long-term structural bulls on Europe by any means, for reasons we have often explained and will mention again below).

Sentiment on emerging markets is gradually improving, and flows of investor funds into emerging-market equities -- as indicated by purchases of ETFs -- is picking up (see the chart on the following page). We often track fund flow trends as an indication of shifting investor sentiment and interest.

ETF Inflows to Select Emerging Markets In Millions of U.S. Dollars, Year to Date

Year-to-date, as of this writing, total inflows to emerging-market equity ETFs are up 6.2%; in the past 12 months, they are up 8.5% over the preceding 12-month period. Hedge funds are also increasingly long emerging-market currencies but have not reached “stretched” levels.

Bullish: Central Banks Are In Easing Mode

We’d hoped that 2017 was the year of a coordinated improvement in economic growth across the world’s major developed and developing economies. After both financial tightening and trade conflicts put that growth in question in 2018, 2019 seems to be shaping up as the year of coordinated central bank growth support.

Here’s a rundown of the easing measures being taken by some of the world’s significant central banks:

The U.S. Federal Reserve, after raising rates consistently from 2015 through the end of 2018, made a U-turn in February of this year, putting further raises on hold; in March, they announced plans to end the drawdown of the Fed’s balance sheet (a process which drains liquidity from the global financial system). Most market participants see either zero or one further rate increase in 2019; many believe the Fed’s next move could in fact be a rate cut.

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The European Central Bank (ECB) announced its intention to maintain its negative rates to combat a slowdown in Europe’s economy, and introduced a new round of cheap loans to banks with incentives for those loans to percolate through to the real economy. (The ECB char, Mario Draghi, who staved off a crisis in 2012 with his promise to do “whatever it takes” to save the European financial system, will leave his position in November. His replacement will be determined by European governments sometime after the European Parliament elections in May.)

The Bank of Japan (BOJ), the most vigorous of the post-crisis easers, remains in easing mode as the Japanese economy flirts with another deflationary spell and faces the impact of a sales-tax hike later this year. Many analysts believe that the BOJ’s next move will also be further easing.

The Bank of England (BOE) remains under the cloud of Brexit drama, and is unlikely to take any action to tighten financial conditions until after that drama is resolved.

The Swiss National Bank (SNB), at –0.75%, has the lowest rate of any major central bank, is very likely to stay put and not raise rates.

The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) continues to act to stimulate the Chinese economy; it is likely to further reduce banks’ reserve requirements in order to create more liquidity. (This is on top of other stimulus being enacted by the Chinese government, such as tax cuts and increased bond issuance by local governments.)

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is easing aggressively ahead of Indian elections (leading to some criticism that its actions are politically motivated and compromising its independence), reversing the 0.5% rate increase of 2018. Analysts expect further cuts if good monsoons and compliant oil prices help keep inflation under control.

China Data Improve

China’s economic growth is another of the important factors for emerging markets, as we noted above because Chinese demand is so consequential for Asian emerging-market export economies such as Thailand, Korea, Vietnam, and Malaysia.

On both the sentiment front and in the actual emerging economic data, China is showing reacceleration after its recent growth dip. This is helping broad EM trade volumes to rebound.