|
Sep 9th 2008
From Economist.com
A housing boom has investors swooning
INTERNATIONAL investors have grown less excited recently about emerging markets. But despite all the talk about the “decoupling” them from America’s economy, it turns out that when America has a cold, the rest of the world still sneezes—even if, thanks to the emergence of new sources of demand outside America, it does not get quite as sick as it did. As economic growth has slowed, share prices have tumbled in each of the BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, China) stockmarkets, though they are all well up on what they were in late 2001, when Goldman Sachs invented the acronym.
Of those four, investors are most bullish on Brazil—despite its economy’s history of tanking at the very moment that international investors regain their confidence in it (which, on past form, would be just about now). Brazilian shares may be down by 16% this year in local-currency terms (and 10% in dollars), but they are still worth four times what they were five years ago.
ReutersArjun Divecha, an emerging-markets guru at GMO, an investment firm, thinks the inflation hawks who run Brazil’s economic policy make it especially attractive, despite its reliance on oil and other commodities, which are slipping from their recent highs. This has helped make the real one of the world’s strongest currencies, turning conventional economic wisdom on its head. “Real interest rates have been very high, and will start to come down, which will stimulate a lot of domestic consumption,” Mr Divecha says.
And domestic growth is becoming the important emerging-market story: hundreds of millions of people are earning enough to let them rapidly accumulate higher-value consumer goods, from cars to computers. There may be no clearer example of this than the Brazilian residential property market.
José Paim de Andrade, who founded a Brazilian real-estate investment firm called Maxcap in 2002, could hardly have been more bullish when he visited The Economist in New York last week. He reckons that the housing boom will continue for five to seven years, as the rapid increase in incomes leads to widespread residential upgrading. |
|