Deep Dive: This number provides the most compelling reason to add emerging-market stocks to your portfolio

This post was originally published on this site

Emerging-market stocks have been hot lately, as anticipation builds that there will be a real trade deal between the U.S. and China after many misfires. But that may not be your best reason to consider EM stocks for your portfolio.

Andrew Mathewson, a portfolio manager of the Martin Currie Emerging Markets Fund, argues that lower valuations and the evolution of emerging markets as compelling reasons for investors to diversify beyond U.S. stocks.

Martin Currie is based in Edinburgh, Scotland, and has a history stretching back to the 1880s. The firm was acquired by Legg Mason in 2014. The Martin Currie Emerging Markets Fund was established on June 1, 2015.

Lower valuations

The S&P 500 Index SPX, +0.03%  trades for 17.6 times weighted aggregate consensus earnings estimates for the next 12 months, among analysts polled by FactSet. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index 891800, -1.14%  trades for only 12 times forward earnings estimates.

Under-represented in portfolios

Emerging-market economies contributed 43.8% of global GDP in 2018, according to the IMF World Economic Outlook. But EM stocks made up only 11.9% of the MSCI All Countries World Index 892400, -0.20% at the end of 2018. This reflects, in part, the prevalence of private ownership in EM, as well as MSCI’s underweighting of China in the index.

But when talking about U.S. investors, Mathewson said most are underweighted to EM even relative to the rather low 11.9% weighting of the broad MSCI index.

An investor who really wants to be diversified should consider adding exposure to what is close to half the world’s economy.

Where the growth is

Some investors may be well aware that the old view of emerging markets — that they are mostly about commodities, materials and cheap manufacturing — is outdated.

But Mathewson believes some U.S.-focused investors may still be under a misconception about EM: “Ten years ago, we would have talked about consumer-staples products,” he said during an interview. But now that there are high levels of market penetration in emerging markets for basic consumer-staples products, “the exciting areas of consumption in EM are about services, experiences and premium-ization.”

He gave an example of a company held by the Martin Currie Emerging Markets Fund that is taking advantage of this trend: LG Household & Health Care of South Korea 051900, +1.74%. The company mainly distributes skin-care products.

“Their key product is an item that costs $150,” Mathewson said. (The fund tends to buy locally traded shares. American depositary receipts (ADR) for LG Household & Health Care trade under this ticker: LGHHF, +0.00%. ) 

The fund manager pointed to something else that may fascinate investors: “This is not a story of a Western brand. This is an emerging-markets luxury brand for emerging-markets consumers.”

Distribution across emerging markets has gotten easier. “Historically, if you were a Korean brand and wanted to sell it in China, you would open a counter in a department store,” he said. Now, “you can expand into markets much more rapidly than you would have been able to.”

Mathewson gave two other examples of stocks held by the fund that underline the evolution of emerging-markets consumers. Odontoprev ODPV3, +0.19%  is a dental insurer in Brazil and Ping An Insurance Group Co. of China 2318, -0.33%  (ADR: PNGAY, +0.30% ) is a giant and rapidly growing conglomerate that provides life and property and casualty insurance, as well as investment services.

Here’s a comparison of the MSCI Emerging Markets Index’s allocation to six sectors at the end of 2008 and at the end of 2018:

Sector Share of MSCI EM Index – end of 2018 Share of MSCI EM Index – Jan. 1, 2008
Financials 25% 22%
Consumer 17% 9%
Information Technology 14% 10%
Communications Services 14% 12%
Materials 8% 15%
Energy 8% 18%
Other 14% 15%
Sources: Martin Currie, FactSet

Financial services remains the largest sector, though consumer, IT and communications have increased greatly as energy and materials have lost importance.

Technology growth

Ten years ago, “emerging-markets tech companies were assemblers of laptops, etc.,” Mathewson said, but today they are manufacturers of batteries and “leaders in memory.”

He sees the battery space as the best way to invest in the transition to electric vehicles. Mathewson named two Korean manufacturers held by the Martin Currie Emerging Markets Fund: Samsung SDI 006400, +0.85%  (whose global depositary receipts trade under the ticker SSDIY, +0.00% ), and LG Chem 051910, +1.59%  (ADR: LGCLF, +0.00% ). 

The fund’s largest holding is Samsung Electronics 005930, +0.57%, which Mathewson expects to continue to benefit from high rates of e-commerce penetration in emerging markets. 

Legg Mason

Andrew Mathewson, portfolio manager of the Martin Currie Emerging Markets Fund.

How to beat the benchmark

The Martin Currie Emerging Markets Fund’s institutional shares MCEIX, -0.79%  have a five-star rating from Morningstar (the highest) and are available through investment advisers. They have a 1% annual expense ratio, which Morningstar considers “below average” for U.S. diversified EM funds. The fund’s FI MEFIX, -0.71%  shares can be purchased without going through an adviser, are rated four stars and have annual expenses of 1.35%, a level Morningstar considers “average.”

The fund’s benchmark is the MSCI Emerging Markets Index 891800, -1.14%, which includes more than 1,100 stocks across 26 countries.

Mathewson and his colleagues try to beat the performance of the index by managing a concentrated portfolio of 40 to 60 stocks, among index components. He said that the Martin Currie team selects stocks from the bottom up, but it is careful not to let its country allocations differ significantly from those of the index.

They look for high-quality companies that are “mispriced by the market.” Mathewson defined high-quality companies as “businesses that make good returns and have a balance sheet that will allow them to invest and take advantage of the growth opportunities we believe they will have.”

He cited Tencent Holdings 700, -2.32% as an example, because of the “monetization being developed” through its “integrated payments and QR codes.”

QR codes are identifiers for small merchants that can be used to pay them with smartphones.

Mathewson drew a contrast between Tencent and Facebook FB, +0.06% : “Facebook has WhatsApp and Instagram, but they are relatively stand-alone businesses. We all use WhatsApp but they are not earning from it.”

This points to much more rapid adoption of electronic payments in emerging markets than in the U.S. and other Western countries. E-commerce made up 23% of China’s retail sales in 2017, compared with 9% for the U.S., according to Statista.

Here are performance comparisons for the Martin Currie Emerging Markets Fund’s two share classes against the index, net of expenses, in U.S. dollars, through Nov. 12:

Total return – 12 months Total return – 3 years Total return from inception: June 1, 2015
Martin Currie Emerging Markets Growth Fund – Institutional shares 21.0% 44.0% 31.7%
Martin Currie Emerging Markets Growth Fund – class FI 20.6% 42.5% 30.0%
MSCI Emerging Markets Index (U.S. dollars) 12.2% 35.2% 19.6%

For an annualized comparison, the fund’s institutional shares had an average annual return of 12.9% for three years through Nov. 12, while the class FI shares had an average return of 12.5% and the index’s average return was 10.6%, according to FactSet.

Here’s a list of the top 10 holdings of the Martin Currie Emerging Markets Fund as of Sept. 30, with their current weighting in the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF EEM, +0.07%, which tracks the benchmark index:

Company Country Ticker Share of portfolio as of Sept. 30 Share in EEM as of Nov. 8
Samsung Electronics Co. South Korea 005930, +0.57% 7.96% 3.80%
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. ADR Taiwan TSM, -0.88% 7.70% 4.34%
Tencent Holdings Ltd. China 700, -2.32% 6.55% 4.25%
Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. ADR China BABA, +0.76% 6.43% 4.69%
Ping An Insurance Group Co. of China Class H China 2318, -0.33% 3.28% 1.15%
Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Ltd. Class H China 1398, -0.89% 2.98% 0.82%
OTP Bank Nyrt. Hungary OTP, -0.58% 2.94% 0.18%
Titan Co. India 500114, +0.79% 2.90% 0.09%
Lukoil PJSC Russia RU: LKOH 2.63% 0.65%
Credicorp Ltd. Peru BAP, -0.19% 2.56% 0.24%
Sources: Martin Currie, FactSet

Aside from Taiwan Semiconductor TSM, -0.88%, Alibaba BABA, +0.76% and Creditcorp BAP, -0.19%, the fund’s top holdings are stocks bought in local markets. For some of these, American depositary receipts are available:

Don’t miss: This holiday gift could earn your child $52,927

Create an email alert for Philip van Doorn’s Deep Dive columns here.

Add Comment