At various stages of the markets when the global financial markets tend to be linked to each other on a day to day basis most investors lose focus on the fact that over the long run higher growth economies with better growth prospects and earnings growth will outperform on a sustainable basis. However the key is that the decoupling always happens over a period of time and in times of panic and euphoria most markets tend to be linked to each other.
At this point of time the investor focus largely is around the crisis in the
In the Euro zone the issues related to the troubled countries have been well talked about however the rumors around the downgrade of
In this over all scenario the focus will again shift to BRICS plus other high growth emerging economies that constitute around 20% of the world economy at this stage. These markets underperformed the developed markets since November 2010 till July 2011 mainly due to inflation concerns. The play for this short period of time essentially that the Western economies are now reviving fast and with low inflation and the developing countries will need to reduce growth in order to control inflation. This strategy did work for a short period of time, however this was largely a result of QE2 from the US Fed which unleashed a wave of liquidity into the global market place and instead of going into improving credit and economic growth in the
That brings us to the question of decoupling. In the previous market phase of the beginning of the rally of the markets in early 2003 till the bottom in March 2009 is as follows – Whereas the world index moved down by 17% in this period the Indian markets were up 240% and the MSCI EM Index was up 166%. (For some reason I am not able to upload the graph, which could have been more illustrative. The outperformance really took off after the fall of May 2004. At the beginning of the BRICS rally in 2003
In the second phase that started in March 2009 the MSCI World is up just 46% as against 102% for MSCI EM and 109% for the Sensex. This has been despite a severe underperformance of Indian markets over the period November 2010 till July 2011. I believe a strong decoupling phase similar to what started in May/June 2004 and got accelerated in July/August 2006 is likely to start now as poor economic prospects in the West and lack of reckless money printing will keep commodity prices subdued. The reasons for the same will be as follows
Given the state of the global economy, specifically the
A shattered financial system, low savings rate and high fiscal deficits will take years to repair
Given the fact that a large part of these economies is driven by consumption, rising unemployment and pressure on wages will subdue economic growth
In the short run these economies can be pump primed through fiscal measures
However over the next 5-10 years economic growth in these countries is likely to be between 0-2%
High fiscal deficits will lead to a reduction in spending and increase in taxes which will further drag economic growth
However in this period,
As a huge deluge of dollar looks for better returns, most developing economies with potential for reasonable returns will get huge inflows
This will be a period of growth with low inflation as 50% of the world will not grow and demand pressures will be low
External borrowings will remain cheap
Fiscal deficit will not be a concern for fast growing economies like
Consumption will revive strongly as the situation stabilizes. Credit availability will be strong as NPA levels have been well controlled
As such the current phase of panic in the markets could be one of the best buying phases of the markets for any investor with a medium term perspective. This is not the time to be scared out of the markets but to be scared in.
“The actual risk tends to be the lowest when the perceived risk is the highest”