Here is one sign of improving market sentiment: money is heading east again. Over the past fortnight, foreign investors have ploughed more than $500m into Asian equity funds, reports EPFR Global.

Trough medicine
© Financial Times

And why wouldn’t they? One of the most popular barometers of risk appetite – the MSCI Asia ex-Japan index – has gained almost a fifth since touching a four-year low at the end of October. Over the same period, the S&P 500 has shed a 10th. Nine of the top 10 stock indices this year are in emerging markets, led by China’s 28 per cent surge. Templeton’s Mark Mobius, among other luminaries, says it is time to back up the truck and chase bargain assets.

Beware the rallying bear. In January 1998, when Asian markets had halved from their July 1997 peak, flows into regional funds also turned positive, points out Citi. But those who got in then lost about a third of their money before markets finally bottomed in early September. Back then, the proportion of assets held in cash in Asian-focused funds also peaked at 17 per cent – five times higher than current levels. Other indicators, such as price/book value, are scarcely more tempting now. So far, real estate is the only sector marked down to the lows reached during the last recession.

The most intense phase of the financial crisis may well be over. But the economic crisis is only just limbering up. Take China: in the past week alone, steel prices slipped further, foreign direct investment contracted sharply, coal sales tumbled, power demand remained anaemic, fixed investment in property hit a multi-decade low, and the finance ministry ordered big cuts to travel and entertainment budgets to arrest a rising budget deficit.

Investors sorely want China to save the world: almost all the new money into Asian funds was into exchange traded funds tracking China and other China-focused funds. But a more reliable indicator than the Shanghai market, off limits to most foreigners, are the H-shares that trade in Hong Kong, down 6 per cent this year. Hardly the hallmark of a dawning bull market.

BACKGROUND NEWS

The next “bull-market” rally has begun and there are bargains in every emerging market following a record slump in stocks, Templeton Asset Management’s Mark Mobius said, reports Bloomberg.

Emerging markets made up the 10 best-performing benchmark gauges this year, led by the 26 per cent gain for China’s Shanghai Composite index.

Emerging markets are in “better shape” than developed economies, said Mr Mobius, who helps oversee about $20bn of emerging- market assets as executive chairman at San Mateo, California-based Templeton. The fund is looking for companies that are “cash-rich,” have low debt and higher dividend yields, or those that can invest for future growth yet have cash left to pay shareholders, he said.

To e-mail the Lex team confidentially click here
OR
To post public comments click here

The Lex column is now on Twitter. To receive our daily line-up and links to Lex notes via Twitter, click here

_________________________________________

Lex is the FT’s agenda-setting column, giving an authoritative view on corporate and financial matters. It is also one of the few parts of FT.com available only to Premium subscribers. This article is provided for free as an example. A Premium subscription gives you unlimited access to all FT content, including all Lex articles and the FT mobile Newsreader.

Subscribe now

If you have questions or comments, please e-mail help@ft.com or call:

US and Canada: +1 800 628 8088
Asia: +852 2905 5555
UK, Europe and rest of the world: +44 (0)20 7775 6248

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2024. All rights reserved.
Reuse this content (opens in new window) CommentsJump to comments section

Follow the topics in this article

Comments

Comments have not been enabled for this article.