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Friday, October 13, 2006

Gateway To Growth


Patrick Mange is a doctorate in Economics from Germany. During his Ph.D days he floated a company with a few university friends. Years later he sold his shares in the company and joined Deutsche Bank in Frankfurt before moving to Paris. In the beginning, he was in bond research. Afterwards, he worked for Merrill Lynch and subsequently moved to BNP Paribas as head of strategy and research. He was recently in India after BNP Paribas took a 49.9 per cent stake in Sundaram AMC. Excerpts from an interview:

What is your view on global markets? The markets across the board have fallen and now there are worries like the middle-east crisis. So where do you see the global markets heading?
That is a hundred million dollar question! We are again in a transition phase in terms of monetary policies, economic growth and profit growth, at least in the US, which remains the benchmark and thus in focus as regards global equities. Such phases are characterised by low visibility and thus high volatility, which generally last for some time. We believe that markets, equities as well as bonds, are going to be quite choppy through the summer months if not a bit longer. But we are also convinced that equities will do well in the medium run, once investors recognise that we are not facing a hard landing and that profits growth is unlikely to collapse. We are still positive on equities but have progressively reduced the risk of our portfolio since the start of the year to take on jittery times ahead. We have also come back to close to neutral on government bonds. They are still expensive, but we think that yields are not likely to increase much from here.

There are certain exogenous factors — things related to geo-political events for example — that also have to be taken into account. If the middle-east crisis spreads, then we will have some more worries in the markets, as the likelihood of a faster downturn would meaningfully increase. But we don’t expect this to happen. I believe that geo-political risk premium will remain in the markets for the next few years. But its importance in the eyes of investors will be variable as in the past. Among the global markets, we are overweight on the US after a long time. This means that we are automatically a bit more defensive since the US has a lower beta to the MSCI World. We are tactically underweight on Japan, a bet which was difficult to take because we are still positive on Japan in economic terms. But we are more positive on some other countries as regards cyclical positioning of the economy.

Among the emerging markets, we are currently underweight on India. But here again it is an alpha story not a beta story. We believe that there are some other markets in the rest of the emerging world, which are likely to outperform now.

We are tactically underweight on China too, despite strong economic growth. Growth is not everything. You make profits with volume, or you make profits with margins. And I believe that making profits with margins is better. And therefore, we would not bet upon China yet. But we would now start to bet upon South Korea, a market that has been strongly sold lately, and to some extent Taiwan. The tech news is getting in such a negative territory that it’s difficult to believe it can get bad further. The rest of Asia is more or less neutral or underweight. We are overweight on the high beta Latin American markets. Markets like Chile, Brazil and Mexico are the ones we are looking at more closely. These markets also play the role of a commodity proxy or hedge. Thanks to commodity revenues, they have built up huge financial reserves and hence, look sheltered against any deep financial crisis. Generally we remain strategically bullish on emerging markets, which undoubtedly are in a much better shape from a structural point of view. They are the markets of today, not yesterday.