A recent conference on investment opportunities in Asia provided a different and more positive insight. While it is true that Asia cannot be immune to the ongoing US slowdown, and while it faces a number of serious challenges such as rising inflation, the longer-term growth story remains in tact. The shift of economic power to emerging markets, and especially Asia, is an unstoppable force that investors ignore at their peril.
The five largest economies in the world in 2007 were respectively the US, Japan, Germany, China and the UK, with America’s economic output more than three times that of its closest rival(3). By 2050, Goldman Sachs predicts that the top five will comprise in descending order: China, India, the US, Brazil and Russia. India’s economy could be 40 times bigger by 2050(3).
Clearly only an extremely long-term investor looks that far ahead, but such is the scale of the transformation over that period that even over much shorter periods the potential investment gains are likely to be significant.
Compared to the over-indebted developed world, Asia’s balance sheet provides a rock-solid foundation for future growth. National savings across the region have more than doubled in the past five years(4), while corporate debt levels have tumbled since Asia’s economic crisis of a decade ago(5). As the region declared “never again” to the currency turmoil in 1997, it has built up an impressive buffer of foreign exchange reserves, worth almost $3trn last year(6).
Asia is much less dependent on exports to the traditional consumer of last resort, America, than it was ten years ago. The US share of exports from Asia has fallen from 18.6% in March 2006 to just 3.1% in March 2008, while both Europe and commodity producing countries have increased their shares to 20% and 37% respectively(7).
Asia is also providing the impetus behind a rapid expansion in global infrastructure. Spending on roads, rail, water, hospitals and the like in emerging markets is forecast to treble over the next ten years with more than half the total spend earmarked for Asian countries(9). As a result, Rio Tinto was able to negotiate a 96% price rise for iron ore this week(10).
The whole agricultural supply chain from inputs like seed, fertilisers and pesticides to farmland, logistics, food manufacturing and retail is also being transformed by Asia’s rapidly changing eating habits. Between 1990 and 2005, it is estimated that Asia’s share of global meat consumption rose from 21% to 33%(11).
Other concerns include inadequate infrastructure, lack of depth in some frontier markets and the risk of government intervention such as China’s recent increase in the cost of petrol.
But overall, these are prices that investors should be prepared to pay for a fantastic unfolding opportunity. The breadth of the Asian investment universe is increasing rapidly, with 286 of the 500 constituents of India’s Sensex index now valued at more than $500m(13).
The link between GDP and stock market size is inexact. But with the Asia Pacific region accounting for 16% of world GDP but only 10% of the value of global stock markets, there is plainly some catching up to do(15). It would be amazing if the region did not account for a considerably higher proportion of total market capitalisation in ten years time than it does today.
Under the shadow of falling house prices, rising fuel and food costs and an ongoing credit squeeze, it can be hard to lift your eyes to the sun rising over the eastern horizon. But that is exactly where many long-term investors are looking.
Fidelity only gives information about its own products and services and does not provide investment advice based on individual circumstances. Reference in this document to specific securities should not be construed as a recommendation to buy or sell these securities, but is included for the purposes of illustration only. Investors should also note that the views expressed may no longer be current and may have already been acted upon by Fidelity. Investments in small and emerging markets can be more volatile than other overseas markets. For funds that invest in overseas markets, changes in currency exchange rates may affect the value of your investment. The value of investments can go down as well as up, so you may get back less than you invested.
Each week Tom Stevenson shares his perspective on the market. Tom has been a financial journalist for nearly 20 years, writing for the Investors Chronicle, The Independent and more recently the Daily Telegraph.
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