Playing Defense In Emerging Markets

Why should emerging-market investors exercise caution in a rising market? With big unresolved challenges, we think it’s prudent to target companies with solid fundamentals and stable business models to overcome macroeconomic uncertainty and build a resilient portfolio for the long-term.

Emerging-market stocks have bounced back in 2019. After dropping more than 14 percent in 2018, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index was up 12.2 percent through the end of April. And then after falling more than 4 percent in early May, many investors are trying to determine whether the upward trend will resume.

However, instead of trying to predict the market’s next move, we think investors should look for the companies with the best chance of beating the 8.4 percent annual returns that the MSCI Emerging Markets has achieved on average over the past 20 years.

The Case For Not Timing the Market

Despite the strong performance of emerging market stocks this year, there are still plenty of reasons for caution.

Emerging-market stocks have risen and fallen based on two unpredictable factors of late. The first is the prospect for resolution of the US-China trade war, which like many geopolitical events is inherently difficult to predict.

Central bank action, which influences global interest rates, is the second and equally unpredictable factor. Our research shows that emerging-market equities tend to do well when interest rates are rising in emerging markets relative to those in developed markets. However, the path of relative interest rates doesn’t predict performance–the two merely coincide.

There’s also the fact that growth in emerging economies (and in many developed economies) is slowing, making further negative earnings revisions likely. And while emerging-market stocks are somewhat cheap relative to the 23-year average of 14.9 times earnings, our research shows that valuation alone is not a reliable predictor of how they will perform over the next year.

Playing Defense Without Sacrificing Potential Performance

Our research shows that when you tune out the day-to-day noise in the market, dividends and earnings tend to drive total returns in both developed and emerging markets. And the companies with healthy earnings and dividend payouts tend to have strong, predictable cash flows underpinned by resilient business models and shareholder-friendly management decisions.

Where to find those qualities in emerging markets? Try traditionally defensive sectors such as utilities, infrastructure, and consumer staples. There are many examples of companies in these sectors that handily topped the MSCI Emerging Markets’ 8.9 percent annual returns over the past 10 years.