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Emerging market equities lean into innovation for future growth

In his emerging market equities outlook, Portfolio Manager Daniel Graña believes that identifying innovative companies and prioritizing good governance offer a path to navigate a near-term environment clouded by geopolitical and policy uncertainty.

Daniel J. Graña, CFA

Daniel J. Graña, CFA

Portfolio Manager


Dec 12, 2023
3 minute watch

Key takeaways:

  • Although leveraged to powerful secular trends, emerging market stocks will likely be influenced by the political calendar and policy decisions in 2024.
  • We would not be surprised by elevated volatility in emerging markets until there is greater visibility on where interest rates settle, globally, and the risk of broader policy error diminishes.
  • We believe that emerging market stocks offer investors exposure to favorable demographics strong economic growth and exciting structural trends.

Market GPS

MANAGER OUTLOOKS 2024

IMPORTANT INFORMATION

Foreign securities are subject to additional risks including currency fluctuations, political and economic uncertainty, increased volatility, lower liquidity and differing financial and information reporting standards, all of which are magnified in emerging markets.

Equity securities are subject to risks including market risk. Returns will fluctuate in response to issuer, political and economic developments.

Commodities (such as oil, metals and agricultural products) and commodity-linked securities are subject to greater volatility and risk and may not be appropriate for all investors. Commodities are speculative and may be affected by factors including market movements, economic and political developments, supply and demand disruptions, weather, disease and embargoes.

What themes do you anticipate will most influence emerging market equities in 2024?

The key themes for emerging markets in 2024 are the direction of the Fed – and that has implications for the strength of the dollar. The political calendar – we have a lot of elections, not only in emerging markets like India, but also in the United States; that has enormous implications for U.S. policies toward emerging markets, like China. China macro: Can the Chinese policymakers stabilize and deal with the excesses of the past economic model? And lastly, geopolitics. Clearly, 2023 was a story of more and more complexity on geopolitics. Hopefully, 2024 will be less noisy, but perhaps that’s some kind of consideration that we have to think about for 2024.

Where do you expect the most compelling opportunities emerging markets?

I think there are two key areas that I would look to for attractive investment opportunities. Number one is India at the right valuations; it is the one that can credibly grow, [with] high-single-digit GDP growth for two decades. It has the right ecosystem for innovation. It has the right political structure, transparency, the right demographics, the right management teams that understand the role of capital markets.

The other is innovation. Innovation in EM is growing. We have more and more stories in emerging markets that are looking to solve EM-specific issues, leveraging technology. There is biopharma. There’s most of the global supply chain, and solar and wind, and EV batteries.

What is the single most underappreciated risk for emerging market equities?

The key risk that I would highlight for 2024 in emerging markets is policy error. It could be policy error in terms of mismanaging the trade relationship and political relationship between China and the United States. It could be the mismanagement of stabilizing the growth in China. It could be maybe the Middle East spiralling out of control.

Is there particular data that you believe merits close monitoring?

In terms of charts or data that we should monitor in emerging markets, the data in China is manufactured; and so, you have to be a little bit more creative about what kind of data series you look at. I would certainly look at U.S. core inflation because that will have implications about the Fed policy, and that’s going to have implications for the cost of capital for emerging markets. Commodities, to get a sense of underlying demand for global growth.

And lastly, perhaps North Asian exports. That gives you a temperature check on developed market and demand and gives you also a sense of how some of the North Asian countries are faring in the more difficult 2024 environment. And it also gives you a snapshot into what’s going on in China.

What’s the most important takeaway for investors regarding emerging market equities?

Why buy emerging markets? Let me reframe the question: Why buy a narrow U.S. equity market trading at expensive valuations, when you could buy emerging markets that’s not as well understood, not as well invested, not as expensive, with a lot of these great attractive companies?

There’s no doubt we need to deal with some cyclical headwinds in terms of what the Fed is going to do and the U.S. political cycle and so forth. But in terms of where we’re going in terms of policy, EM is easing. Economic growth is improving. And that can’t be said in developed markets. And so, I would say that the cyclical case for emerging markets is very exciting to me.

This information is issued by Janus Henderson Investors (Australia) Institutional Funds Management Limited (AFSL 444266, ABN 16 165 119 531). The information herein shall not in any way constitute advice or an invitation to invest. It is solely for information purposes and subject to change without notice. This information does not purport to be a comprehensive statement or description of any markets or securities referred to within. Any references to individual securities do not constitute a securities recommendation. Past performance is not indicative of future performance. The value of an investment and the income from it can fall as well as rise and you may not get back the amount originally invested.

 

 

Whilst Janus Henderson Investors (Australia) Institutional Funds Management Limited believe that the information is correct at the date of this document, no warranty or representation is given to this effect and no responsibility can be accepted by Janus Henderson Investors (Australia) Institutional Funds Management Limited to any end users for any action taken on the basis of this information. All opinions and estimates in this information are subject to change without notice and are the views of the author at the time of publication. Janus Henderson Investors (Australia) Institutional Funds Management Limited is not under any obligation to update this information to the extent that it is or becomes out of date or incorrect.

Daniel J. Graña, CFA

Daniel J. Graña, CFA

Portfolio Manager


Dec 12, 2023
3 minute watch

Key takeaways:

  • Although leveraged to powerful secular trends, emerging market stocks will likely be influenced by the political calendar and policy decisions in 2024.
  • We would not be surprised by elevated volatility in emerging markets until there is greater visibility on where interest rates settle, globally, and the risk of broader policy error diminishes.
  • We believe that emerging market stocks offer investors exposure to favorable demographics strong economic growth and exciting structural trends.