Emerging Markets Tough Puzzle To Solve

[This article originally appeared in our May issue of ETF Report.]

For emerging market investors, 2015 landed one sucker punch after another.

China’s slowdown. Brazil’s Petrobras scandal. The Syrian refugee crisis. All that and more coalesced into a perfect storm that battered broad-based EM funds last year, including the two leading ETFs, the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF (VWO | B-95) and the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF (EEM | B-100), which plummeted 15.8% and 15.4%, respectively.

All that said, both funds rallied more than 10% in March, their best monthly performance since 2012. The drivers behind that, though, had more to do with a falling dollar and a U.S. stock market rally than the head winds they’ve been fighting. All of this certainly has investors wondering how they should approach this space.

China’s Economy Pumps Its Brakes
Several poor fundamentals plagued developing markets in 2015. None was as damaging, however, as China’s economic slump.

For the past decade, China’s role as the world’s factory has fueled its more than 10% annual growth rate and nourished demand for raw commodities in other developing countries worldwide. But the larger an economy grows, the harder it is to keep growing. So it was inevitable that China would slow down eventually—and it finally happened in 2015.

Why last year? The reasons are manifold, but one of the biggest is China’s massive credit overhang. During the 2008 financial crisis, Beijing shelled out $586 billion to keep its economy afloat. While this stimulus package let China strong-arm its way through the global downturn, it also left the country with an enormous debt burden. By 2015, the nation’s total debt (including that from the government, banks, corporations and households) had skyrocketed to well over 250% of GDP.

Further cuts to the cost of borrowing in 2014 didn’t help matters. Nor did monetary policy in which China’s central bank let the yuan depreciate sharply in 2014, only to then intervene with six rapid-fire rate cuts over the next year.

Complicating matters is China’s looming labor shortage. The country’s mammoth manufacturing sector depends on cheap, plentiful labor, but that’s become increasingly difficult to come by given an aging workforce and a youth population uninterested in lower-paid factory jobs. As a result, the country suffers from overcapacity and oversupply, and has seen its pace of exports slow.

To deal with this, China’s government has introduced fiscal reforms designed to transition the country from a production economy to a service-based one, while also simultaneously attempting to preserve political stability. It’s a delicate balancing act, though, and the penalties of failure are steep.