Are Emerging-Markets Stocks Too Cheap to Ignore?

Almost, but not quite.

Securities In This Article
iShares MSCI Brazil ETF
(EWZ)
Petroleo Brasileiro SA Petrobras ADR
(PBR)
Vale SA ADR
(VALE)
iShares MSCI Emerg Mkts Min Vol Fctr ETF
(EEMV)
iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF
(EEM)

A version of this article was published in the September 2015 issue of Morningstar ETFInvestor. Download a complimentary copy of ETFInvestor by visiting the site.

Emerging-markets stocks have gone from the penthouse to the outhouse. Over the 10-year period ended Oct. 31, 2010, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index experienced an annualized return of 14.62%. The S&P 500’s annualized return was negative 0.02% over this same span. For the five-year period ended Oct. 31, 2015, the MSCI Emerging Markets benchmark declined by 2.8% on an annualized basis, while the S&P 500 was in full-on bull-market mode, gaining 14.33% annually. Today, emerging-markets stocks are unloved, rife with risk, and (unsurprisingly) were recently trading at their lowest levels since 2009. Have they gotten too cheap to ignore?

Investors’ appetite for emerging-markets stocks has apparently waned. From September 2005 through January 2013, emerging-markets equity exchange-traded funds amassed $102 billion in cumulative inflows. In the intervening two-plus years, over $15 billion has flowed out of these funds. Sentiment has soured on the basis of poor relative performance and fraying fundamentals.

Where to begin with the risks? China, of course. The whipsawing Chinese equity market has put the world on edge. I don’t think investors should be as concerned with the ups and downs of the Shanghai Composite Index so much as they should be worried over the broader implications of slowing growth in the Chinese economy. The Flash China Caixin PMI--a key gauge of manufacturing activity in China--fell to its lowest level in almost seven years in September before rebounding slightly (though still indicating contraction in manufacturing activity) in October. Slowing output from “the world’s factory” forebodes weaker export demand and declining demand for raw materials. For years China has been the dominant marginal consumer of (insert a metal, hydrocarbon, or foodstuff of your choice here), so slowing growth is having and will continue to have ripple effects that will be felt disproportionately by its export-oriented raw-materials providers.

Nowhere are the ripple effects of slowing growth in China more evident than in Brazil. Brazil’s exports of everything from beef to iron ore have declined dramatically as Chinese demand has tapered. This has left the country’s economy in a lurch and weighed on the local stock market, which was not long ago dominated by export-oriented firms like government-controlled energy producer

Investors are growing ever-more fearful of emerging markets, so is now the time to be greedy? Emerging-markets equity valuations are looking increasingly compelling, especially on a relative basis. However, in light of the myriad risks they’re facing today, I’d say: almost, but not quite.

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Per Research Affiliates’ expected return data, emerging-markets stocks (as represented by the MSCI Emerging Markets Index) had the highest expected returns of any major asset class as of the end of September. Research Affiliates’ data also show the current Schiller P/E ratio for emerging-markets stocks, at 11, its lowest level ever, and well below its median value of 19 (this data series dates back to 1995). Emerging-markets stocks also feature at the top (if you exclude timber) of GMO’s most recent seven-year asset-class real-return forecast. Ben Inker, co-head of asset allocation at the firm, recently cited emerging-markets value stocks as a “best idea” in a Forbes profile. [1] While valuations are compressed, it’s impossible to say that the worst is behind this asset class and whether expectations of pain to come have already been priced into these markets.

As it stands today, the

Morningstar ETFInvestor

portfolios have a fair-sized (underwater) bet in place that emerging-markets stocks will pick themselves up. This takes the form of our allocation to

EEMV is less risky than its broad cap-weighted peers by design. This has panned out in practice recently, as evidenced by its lower drawdowns and lesser volatility relative to its market-cap-weighted peers like

EEMV’s lower risk profile is also apparent at a more fundamental level, as evidenced by the composition of its portfolio, specifically EEMV’s tilt toward defensive stocks and its lesser degree of exposure to state-owned enterprises. EEMV had 25.81% of its portfolio in defensive names and 37.59% in stocks Morningstar characterizes as cyclical as of Nov. 9, 2015. This compares with respective figures of 13.89% and 44.52% for EEM. Large SOEs (most notably, Chinese banks and insurance and energy firms) are also underrepresented in EEMV’s portfolio relative to EEM. This lessens concentration risk as well as the risk associated with forking over capital to a class of entities that might not put maximizing shareholder wealth at the top of their to-do lists.

[1] Schaefer, S. 2015. "The New Money Masters: GMO Asset Allocation Whiz Ben Inker." Fortune. June 29, 2015. http://www.forbes.com/sites/steveschaefer/2015/06/17/new-money-masters-gmo-inker-asset-allocation/

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About the Author

Ben Johnson

Head of Client Solutions, Asset Management
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Ben Johnson, CFA, is the head of client solutions, working with asset-management clients to leverage Morningstar's capabilities in advancing our shared mission of empowering investor success.

Prior to assuming his current role in 2022, Johnson was the director of global exchange-traded fund and passive strategies research within Morningstar's manager research group. Earlier in his tenure in the manager research organization, he served as the director of ETF research for Europe and Asia. He also previously served as a senior equity analyst, covering the agriculture and chemicals industries. Before joining Morningstar in 2006, he worked as a financial advisor for Morgan Stanley.

Johnson holds a bachelor's degree in economics from the University of Wisconsin. He also holds the Chartered Financial Analyst® designation. In 2015, Fund Directions and Fund Action named Johnson among the 2015 Rising Stars of Mutual Funds.

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