Growth: the final frontier

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18 Nov 2014

Frontier markets have enjoyed strong growth of late, but  investors need to consider more  than just the headline figures  before investing. Pádraig Floyd  investigates.

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Frontier markets have enjoyed strong growth of late, but  investors need to consider more  than just the headline figures  before investing. Pádraig Floyd  investigates.

However, while frontier markets are showing  rapid growth, this is from a relatively  low level and even if there are established  capital markets, they may not be very extensive  and the issue of liquidity must be  remembered,  says Oliver Bell, portfolio  manager, T Rowe Price Frontier Markets.

“One of the key things institutional clients,  including pensions funds need to look at is  whether this opportunity set is big enough  and liquid enough so they can make a sizeable  allocation,” says Bell.

This is because the frontier is small in comparison  to emerging and developed markets  – perhaps 1% the total global market  equity, suggests Bell – and clients need to  think beyond the single index.

“For example, Saudi Arabia on its own is  between $200bn and $300bn, so by including  Saudi Arabia, you can triple the market  cap. There is also potential for some really  big markets to come into the indices, such as Iran,” adds Bell.

We are seeing the kind of growth that was  experienced in the emerging markets over  the past 15 years, he adds.

“Frontier markets may make up a very  small percentage of the total market cap,  but they make up 18% of global GDP. The  US on its own is around 18%, so there are  opportunities, particularly as the populations  which already make up a third of the  global population continue to grow.”

The danger with demographies like this is  if the growth does not happen. Then you  have a scenario like the one witnessed in  Libya and elsewhere, during the Arab  Spring, where large numbers of unemployed  young men vented their frustrations  through civil unrest.

POLITICAL RISK 

Though important, liquidity isn’t necessarily  the first thing that springs to mind for  most investors when considering frontier  markets.

Thirty years ago, most of  the growth hotspots  in Asia were wracked by bitter civil war,  and more recently the same was true in  Africa.

Yet, that has changed and democracy has  become the prevailing model in most of  sub-Saharan Africa. Ivory Coast had a civil war in 2011 over an  election result. The government defaulted,  but with a large and well-educated population  and promising prospects before the  war, it turned out to be a long-term good  investment  for investors who stayed in. But  you don’t always get that lucky and political  risk will remain the way of life in Africa, at  least for the time being, says Kaan Nazli,  senior economist at Neuberger Berman.

“We have a country model and in that, ESG  makes up 40% – and political risk is a part  of that – alongside worldwide statistics,  transparency, etc, so when a country comes  to the market for the first time, it helps you  to position them in comparison to others.”

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