Solation shields frontier stock markets from crash
Trading with whiteboards and paper slips, a handful of fledgling
stock markets such as Iraq and Ghana have escaped the crash of their
more developed rivals - benefiting in large part from isolation and lack
of liquidity.
Ghana's stock exchange is up 60 percent this year according to the
official indicator, in sharp contrast to other emerging markets which
are down more than 60 percent on the year to date, savaged by recent
market turmoil.
The official indicator for Baghdad's Iraqi stock exchange showed it
soaring 40 percent in September alone - the same month Lehman Brothers
went bankrupt and other markets nosedived. Some distrust that figure,
but say that overall, Iraqi stocks remain in positive territory this
year.
Neither market is electronically traded - although both aim to become
so. Both have been largely overlooked by foreign investors even during
the recent boom in frontier markets that preceded the crash.
Godvig Capital fund manager Bjorn Englund - whose $22 million Babylon
fund is the only substantial foreign portfolio investor in the Iraqi
bourse - says the moral for investing in a downturn is clear.
"The lesson is that you shouldn't follow the herd," he told Reuters
by telephone from his office in Sweden. "You have to go somewhere where
other people are not, where you have the first- mover advantage."
Other markets still up by mid-November included Tunisia and Ecuador,
again small markets with little foreign involvement. By contrast,
according to index provider MSCI Barra, more mainstream frontier markets
from Nigeria to the Middle East have broadly tracked the standard
emerging markets index.
The Iraqi stock exchange lost well over half its value after it
opened in 2004 following the U.S. invasion the previous year, but has
benefited this year from a dramatic fall in sectarian violence and,
until recently, from high oil prices.
As world markets tumbled last month, sweaty investors waved and made
hand signals at the brokers working behind a low partition. Hotels and
banks are the hottest picks among the exchange's 95 listed companies, as
investors eye a reconstruction bonanza and the need to house expatriate
workers.
Englund said Iraq's isolation from global markets was also key.
International investors are often highly leveraged and liable to sudden
margin calls, prompting them to pull money from emerging markets across
the board regardless of fundamentals.
"There is very little foreign money in the (Iraqi) market so it has
not seen the sort of outflows you have had elsewhere," he said. "The
exchange has been immune to what has happened in the outside world."
But the market is far from transparent, he warned. He is sceptical of
the official main index figures, saying its calculation is opaque and
does not always correspond to movements in the main stocks.
The more liquid ISX banking index, which makes up more than 80
percent of turnover, was flat in September and has risen 6.2 percent
this year in local currency or 9.6 percent in U.S. dollar terms as the
dinar strengthened. "That is still pretty good when you compare it to
what has happened elsewhere," Englund said.
Ghana too has benefited from good local fundamentals, based around
recent oil discoveries, good prices for its main gold and cocoa exports,
political stability and economic growth, although the market has
retreated from its peaks of early October.
The IMF expects Ghana's economic growth to slow to 5.8 percent in
2009 from a projected 6.5 percent this year as the global slowdown hits.
But those rates are still well ahead of advanced economies, where 2009
growth is seen below 0.5 percent. Reuters
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