Every investor knows that the time to buy is when stocks are beaten down and cheap. But few investors actually do that. Why? Because stocks usually get trashed for a reason. They get cheap because the news about them is terrible.
Take emerging markets. The news is awful. Most important: The once-sizzling Chinese economy is slowing markedly. What's more, no one believes the government's economic numbers.
Slower growth in China has led to a sharp decline in demand for commodities. That's led once high-flying developing nations such as
Just consider the returns for the MSCI Emerging Markets index. Over the past five years, the index lost an annualized 2.9%. Over the same period, the MSCI EAFE index, which tracks stocks in developed foreign markets, returned an annualized 4.8% and Standard & Poor's 500-stock index gained an annualized 13.7%. And the selloff has accelerated. Over the past 12 months, the emerging markets index plunged 15.7%, while the EAFE index fell 2.0% and the S&P 500 gained 2.9%. (All returns are through
Why even consider emerging markets when you can buy presumably safer U.S. stocks, which have also taken a hit lately?
To start with, emerging-markets stocks are much cheaper. The S&P 500 sells for 16 times analysts' estimated earnings for the coming 12 months, but emerging-markets stocks trade for 11 times forecasted earnings. True, a lot of the cheapest emerging-markets stocks are big, ugly commodity producers and partially state-owned companies. But stocks with a P/E of 11 look compelling.
Another reason to be bullish: For U.S.-based investors, much of the decline in emerging-markets stocks stems from a soaring dollar. The dollar has been strong against virtually all currencies, but it has been particularly strong against emerging-markets currencies, many of which have tumbled 20% or more against the greenback. There are good reasons for the strong dollar, but currency values, like values for nearly all asset classes, tend to regress to the mean. In other words, what goes up typically goes down. It just may not happen right away.
Remember, too, that China's slowing growth rate is part of the process in the nation's transition from an exporting powerhouse to a more diversified economy that seeks to better cater to 1.3 billion consumers. China, by the way, accounts for about one-fourth of the total value of emerging-markets stocks.
Listen to
What about the Chinese stock market bubble, now in the midst of a vicious deflation? Both the bubble and the decline have been wildly exaggerated. The Chinese stock markets in
But non-Chinese investors, such as U.S. mutual funds, are limited almost exclusively to the
I'm not arguing that China doesn't face huge challenges. The government's attempt to stop the selloff in mainland China's stocks was a fiasco. One can only hope that the regime's mismanagement was a learning experience on the road to financial modernization.
Johnson helped launch the fund 17 years ago and has seen plenty of ups and downs in emerging markets. "When everyone was talking about emerging markets in 2011 as the only place to go, that was foolish," he says. "Now all you get is talk about how emerging markets are broken, useless. That's just as foolish."
What to buy? The Harding Loevner fund is my favorite no-load fund--in spite of a hard-to-swallow 1.45% annual expense ratio. If you use an adviser, ask about
I know this marks me as old-fashioned, but I'm not keen on emerging-markets index funds. Emerging markets are inefficient, so a first-rate manager can, I believe, cut risk and add to returns. I'd also stay away from individual emerging-markets stocks. You (and I, for that matter) simply don't have access to the necessary information to pick them.
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Steven T. Goldberg is an investment adviser in the Washington, D.C. area and a contributing columnist for Kiplinger. .