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Alumni in the News - July 28

Barron's interviews Arjun Divecha ('79), the portfolio manager of GMO Emerging Markets III Fund. Excerpts: ... emerging markets were hurt twice by the current crisis, from a drop in exports and from a decrease in the availability of cheap foreign credit. However, with savings rates increasing in many developing countries, there is less reliance on foreign capital than there once was.

Barron's interviews Arjun Divecha ('79), the portfolio manager of GMO Emerging Markets III Fund. Some excerpts:

  • Emerging markets were hurt twice by the current crisis, from a drop in exports and from a decrease in the availability of cheap foreign credit. However, with savings rates increasing in many developing countries, there is less reliance on foreign capital than there once was.
  • The four countries that should see the biggest recovery off a bottom are Turkey, Russia, South Korea and Thailand. Turkey and Russia are both very cheap in terms of stock market valuations, and Turkey has a customs union which Divecha considers the most important part of access to the EU. In particular, Turkish banks should do well in a recovery, and the country is competitive in sectors like textiles, machinery and auto parts. Brazil looks good but is lower on the list because other countries are cheaper.
  • Some of the fund's less favorite countries are China, South Africa and India. The fund is negative on China short-term and long-term. Much of the country's stimulus money is not being used productively. Banks could face a growing problem with bad loans. The government could try to fight a credit bubble by strongly cutting liquidity, which could hurt the stock market.
  • The fund is wary about Eastern Europe, which "resembles Asia during the crisis of '97." Many of the countries have too much foreign-denominated debt.
  • Longer-term, the fund is bullish on emerging markets, though a recent rally could lead to a pullback.

 

... more.

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