Macro Research

EM Outlook 2021: Tides are turning. EM equities to take the lead

A cocktail of catalysts are aligning for emerging markets (EMs). The potential combination of a cyclical recovery, dollar weakness, upside in commodity prices and robust earnings rebound are forces that are hard to ignore. We believe the tide is turning for EMs and 2021 could be their year to shine.

  • |
  • Published on 28 Nov 2020

EM Outlook 2021: Tides are turning. EM equities to take the lead | Open a FREE FSMOne account and manage all your investments conveniently in ONE place

  • The overall macro picture of EMs have improved vastly in recent months. As we enter 2021, the combination of i) cyclical recovery, ii) weakening USD, iii) commodity upcycle and iv) continuation of China’s strong recovery should uplift EM’s growth. A vaccine approval next year will be a huge catalyst.
  • Looking ahead, EM equities may see strong performance underpinned by major tailwinds – prolong US dollar weakness and commodity upcycle. These are likely long-term tailwinds, providing a multi-year positive set up for EM equities which is backed by strong inverse correlations. 
  • Given the cyclicality of EM’s corporate earnings, we expect a robust rebound in FY21/22 which is backed by leading indicators such as China’s monetary stimulus and commodity prices. We find consensus’ earnings estimates too conservative and see upwards revision in the next two years, providing the impetus for greater price return from reaction to earnings revision.  
  • Supported by robust double-digit earnings growth projected for the next two years, EM equities (gauged by MSCI EM index), in aggregate, are set to deliver a potential upside of 18% by end-2022, despite the elevated valuation. Our EM top picks - China, S. Korea, Taiwan, Indonesia, Brazil. 

Emerging markets (EMs) have been plagued by numerous challenges in 2020. Undoubtedly, the Covid-19 pandemic played a major role behind the weakness in EM assets. While several economies like Taiwan and South Korea were able to avoid a prolonged outbreak, others like India and Brazil were not as lucky. 

With Covid-19 disrupting almost every aspect of our daily lives, the EMs found themselves wedged between a rock and a hard place. Global demand weakened dramatically while domestic demand was crippled by the pandemic. Together with a sudden tightening of USD liquidity, investors witnessed a massive sell-off in EM assets in March.  

Fortunately, the pain was rather short-lived. Following a drawdown of almost 35% in Q1, EMs have recovered valiantly in Q3 2020. According to our FSMI EM index, which tracks the aggregate performance of all EM funds on our platform, EM funds are already up by +10.8% this year. 

While several uncertainties still persist in the near term, we believe the tide is turning for EMs and are optimistic that 2021 could be the year for EM assets’ outperformance. 

Chart 1.1: EM funds (blue line) was hit hard during March but rebounded robustly in 3Q

Chart 1.2: EM funds, on aggregate, returned 16.3% over a one year period.

Source: iFAST Compilations. 
Data as of November 2020.


EM’s economic recovery gathering steam 


At large, the overall macro picture of EMs have improved vastly in recent months where its economic recovery momentum has notably accelerated. Our observation (as discussed in our recent Asia equities update) concludes that Asian EM’s recovery has gained traction in August/September, where we witnessed a broad improvement of economic numbers, many swinging back to expansionary territory. 

Other major EM regions such as LATAM and EMEA have also experienced a surge in recovery momentum across September and October, despite their ongoing battle with Covid-19. A look at table 1, shows the manufacturing PMI (often a leading indicator for economic activity) rebounding firmly since August for most EMs.

In our opinion, underpinning EM’s recent recovery momentum is the strong combination of i) China’s demand recovery, ii) declining Covid-19 cases, iii) the lagged effect of EM stimulus and iv) global monetary easing. With ameliorating fundamentals under the support of these tailwinds, we believe EM’s economy is more resilient than many think it is.  


Table 1: Valiantly recovery in Major EM’s PMIs since Aug, broad-based swing to expansionary territory

Source: Bloomberg Finance L.P., iFAST Compilations. 
Data as of November 2020.

Chart 2: Rebound in economic activity in EMs (ex China) has surpassed DMs  

Source: Topdown Charts (topdowncharts.com), Refinitiv Datastream, Markit. 
Data as of October 2020.

Cyclical growth rebound in the works 


Entering 2021, we opine that the macro conditions and catalysts are prime for a strong growth rebound in EMs. The combination (as explained below) of cyclical recovery, weakening USD, possible commodity upcycle and continuation of China’s strong recovery can propel EM’s growth. This should be bolstered by a more stable and ‘friendlier’ trade policy under a Biden administration.

Cyclical recovery – With the global economy likely moving from the trough of the economic cycle to the early stages of expansion, we expect strong winds of cyclical recovery. Due to EM’s sensitivity to global demand (i.e. exports-focus, heavy commodity exposure), a cyclical recovery can significantly uplift EM’s growth as evident from historical cycles. EM typically register stellar growth rate of above 5% after an economic trough, evident from previous crises (chart 3). 

Weakening USD – As explain in the section below, a weaker USD is broadly positive for EM’s growth as it i) eases stress from USD funding and ii) is supportive for commodities prices. 

Positive commodity outlook – As explain in the section below, we expect an upcycle in commodity next year and anticipate higher prices. This in turn is supportive for EM’s growth as commodity prices often influences fiscal revenue, trade balance, consumption and investment in EMs.

China’s strong recovery – China’s demand is an integral driver of i) the global industrial cycle (influences commodity demand) and ii) EM exports. We expect China’s robust demand recovery to continue in 2021 for reasons laid out in our recent update on China equities. 


Chart 3: EM’s GDP has always seen strong cyclical recovery after crisis 


Covid-19 vaccine will be a major catalyst for EMs 


The recent slew of vaccine news spell positive for EMs. While major candidates for the Covid-19 vaccines are still under development, the risk-on reaction in reflationary assets have re-affirmed market participants’ optimism on global growth. In our opinion, a vaccine approval (unless late in 2021) should amplify the cyclical recovery, setting the stage for a synchronised global demand rebound. 

EMs will likely be one the largest beneficiaries, given its cyclicality, and may see growth swiftly shifting into top gear. Markets will also likely look pass EM achieving ‘herd immunity’ and the positive impact on EM assets may be significant, particularly EM equities with cyclical and commodity exposure. We expect a sustain rotation into the aforementioned equity segment in 2021, should a vaccine approval come through.

USD weakness a big tailwind for EM equity outperformance


Historically, the dollar traverse in long-term cycles (Chart 4) where the bull and bear trend can lasts anywhere between 6 to 7 years. In our opinion, the dollar’s protracted weakness over recent months, after appreciating around 35% since 2013/14, is a possible signal that we might be in the initial phase of the dollar down-cycle,

Looking ahead, we see continued dollar weakness, especially against EM currencies. The wide interest rate differentials (especially between EM and the US) and possibly greater ‘money printing’ by the Federal Reserve (to finance more government spending under a Biden administration) are strong near-term headwinds for the greenback.

At the same time, a structural US current account deficit coupled with an expected EM economic growth outperformance (USD tends to decline if growth of rest-of-the world outpaces US) also set up the prospects for a longer-term dollar weakness vis-à-vis EM currencies. 

Most importantly, the dollar weakness bodes well for EM assets. There are two key reasons why the EMs benefits from a weaker dollar. Firstly, it alleviates EM’s USD debt repayment stress and default risks, which can be significant headwinds for EM equities. Secondly, dollar weakness tends to support commodity prices, which are largely priced in the greenback. This is positive for EM equities due to their high commodity exposure.

With a possible multi-year dollar down-cycle in the works, we expect stronger and longer-term support for EM equities, which is backed by strong inverse correlations between the dollar’s strength and EM equity prices across history (chart 5). 

Chart 4: The USD possibly headed for a multi-year downcycle


Chart 5: Strong inverse correlations between USD strength and EM equities price


Commodity upside the other big tailwind for EM equity outperformance


Prolonged years of underinvestment (CAPEX for most commodity sector broadly declined since 2012 despite a brief upturn in 2017) by commodity producers has resulted in delayed supply response. This is evident from a drawdown on commodity inventories (for many sectors) over recent quarters as global demand was revitalized. 

In our opinion, this is an uncommon occurrence this early in the economic cycle and may lead to a possible supply shortage, considering potential output cuts planned in 2021 by producers. We also note that the above is a broad observation in the commodity space, but we see greater elements of it playing out in the metal and oil markets currently. 

Transitioning to the demand side, we expect support to come from strong Asia demand as well as the broader global cyclical recovery, which we argue is underway. The recent rally in the industrial metals and oil complex is also implying mounting optimism for global growth. Entering 2021, we remain aware that demand could receive a push from a potential vaccine and further re-opening of economies.

All things considered, years of weak CAPEX and a burgeoning global cyclical recovery are set pieces for a possible supply-demand mismatch. Coupled with the positive backdrop of a weakening dollar, commodity prices could see further upside in the coming years, acting as tailwinds for EM equities which historically tends to be uplifted by rising commodity prices (chart 6). 

Chart 6: Strong inverse correlations between USD and commodity prices


EM’s earnings growth shifting to a higher gear but consensus still conservative


Given the cyclical nature of most EMs, earnings for EM equities (gauged by MSCI EM index) are also subjected to cyclicality and tend to exhibit the periods of large contractions and expansion during cycle downturns and upturns respectively. We believe it is no different for this cycle and expect a robust rebound in FY21/22. While our EM earnings growth projection for FY20 is closely in line with consensus’ expectation of 16%, our projection for FY21/22’s growth rates differ. 

From a sectoral level, we opine that current consensus’ FY21/22 earnings expectation for cyclical sectors (Such as Con. Disc., Financials, Real estate) are too conservative (Table 2), especially after accounting for historical revisions and comparing against growth rates during previous crises. 

Similar observation can be made for earnings growth estimates at an EM country level. Generally, consensus’ FY21/22 earnings growth rates were also conservative for the most cyclical EM markets (Taiwan, S. Korea and Brazil) (Table 3), which we found contradictory when compared against the massive upwards revision and earnings rebound for these markets after each crises.

We believe the conservative earnings estimates warrants an adjustment, backed by our constructive macro outlook for EM, and we project EM earnings to grow robustly by 36.4% (FY21) and 21.9% (FY22) from a bottom-up estimate. 

Given the conservative estimates by consensus, it is likely that 2021 may see upwards revision in EM’s earnings estimates should our macro outlook for EMs hold. This should provide the impetus for greater price return as market should react positively to these revisions.  

Table 2: Consensus estimate of EM’s sectoral earnings growth for FY21/22 are too conservative

Source: Bloomberg Finance L.P., iFAST Compilations. 
Data as of November 2020.

Table 3: Consensus estimate of individual EM’s earnings growth for FY21/22 are also too conservative

 
Source: Bloomberg Finance L.P., iFAST Compilations. 
Data as of November 2020.

Chart 7: Earnings growth forecast for EM equities


Leading indicators pointing to strong earnings rebound ahead


Our constructive view on EM equities’ FY21/22 earnings is reinforced by a combination of leading indicators – constructive growth backdrop, China’s monetary stimulus and upside in commodity prices, which are suggesting robust earnings growth in FY21/22.

In particular, China’s stimulus (proxied by monetary supply growth) has always shown strong correlation with EM corporate’s earnings. Such is the result of China’s domestic demand, heavily influenced by stimulus measures, being an integral driver for EM goods and commodities. As seen from chart 8, recent monetary supply injection is pointing to higher earnings growth over the next 12 months.

Upside in commodity prices also bears strong correlation to EM earnings growth. With EM’s high exposure to commodity, fluctuation in its prices tend to influence margins for EM corporates rather quickly. As seen from chart 9, the recent rally in commodity prices is implying higher earnings growth over the next quarter.

Chart 8: China’s stimulus has strong correlation with EM’s earnings and points to higher growth next year


Chart 9: China’s stimulus has strong correlation with EM’s earnings and points to higher growth in the next quarter



Headwinds and risks for EM equities


With the recent Biden presidential victory coupled with a barrage of positive vaccine news, EM assets in general has rallied significantly as of late. This has engendered a strong wave of re-rating across valuation multiples for EM equities, elevating it to heady levels as earnings revision has yet to catch up. 

Valuation level (as measured by forward PE ratio) for EM equities, in aggregate, are trading fairly above historical mean for both forward Y and Y+1 estimated earnings, as shown in chart 10.  Current levels are also above our fair PE ratio of 13.5X which is signaling some froth in EM equities’ valuation, elevating the risk of de-rating in the near term. 

Yet, this is a minor risk in our view as i) EM equities’ forward PE ratio (Y+1 EPS) is only marginally above our fair PE of 13.5X and ii) we believe many will view a de-rating as dip buying opportunity given mounting risk-on appetite for EM equities. Especially from a longer-term basis, we do not view current valuation overly tainting the shine on EM equities. For investors looking for value in EM markets, Brazil and Indonesia are still relatively cheap to us.

The pandemic presents itself as a primary ongoing risk for EMs. A severe resurgence in cases, be it within EMs or DMs, will spell bad news for a cyclical recovery and a delay in vaccine approval in this scenario could magnify the impact. 

While this scenario has faded behind the volley of positive vaccine news, it remains the key risk to watch for EM equities. Nevertheless, given the uncertainty in Covid-19 cases, it is hard to ascertain the likelihood of the above scenario and thus, does not derail our outlook for EMs significantly. 

Chart 10: Valuation of EM equities have gotten frothy lately

 

EM equities to take the lead in 2021


There is much headroom for EM outperformance in 2021 in our opinion. Supported by robust double-digit earnings growth projected for the next two years, EM equities (as gauged from MSCI EM index) are set to deliver a potential upside of 18% by end-2022, despite their elevated valuation now.

Within EMs, we believe Asia EM equities should lead outperformance early in FY21. It offers a better risk-reward profile, especially for cyclical Asian EM markets, and those that has yet to catch up. LATAM and EMEA equities should offer greater upside potential in FY21 but at the cost of higher risks embedded as fundamentals lacked its Asian peers.  We note, however, that a vaccine approval should alleviate much risk for these two regions. 

Overall, our EM top picks are China, S. Korea, Taiwan, Indonesia, Brazil (table 5).

Looking ahead, we believe a heady cocktail of positive catalysts are aligning for the EMs. The combination of a cyclical recovery, dollar weakness, upside in commodity prices and robust earnings rebound are forces that are hard to ignore. The last time we observed such an alignment of favorable fundamental and macro conditions was after the 2008 GFC – more than a decade ago. 

In addition, the potential of a successful vaccine in 2021 – given the massive push globally – may amplify the tailwinds mentioned above. All things considered, we believe the tide is turing for EMs and 2021 could be their year.

Chart 11: EM equities anchored by strong expected earnings rebound in FY21/22


Table 4: Forecasts for MSCI EM index

Emerging Market (MSCI EM Index)

FY2019

FY2020

FY2021

FY2022

PE ratio (X)

15.3

19.0

13.9

11.4

Expected earnings growth (YoY %)

-13.0%

-16.0%

36.4%

21.9%

Earnings Per Share (EPS)

72.8

64.5

87.9

107.2

Projected fair price (Based on 13.5X fair PE ratio)

 

-

-

1447

Potential upside (%)

-

-

-

18%

Source: Bloomberg Finance L.P., iFAST estimates. Data as of 25 Nov 2020.


Table 5: 2021 views on our EM top picks 

EM equity

Rationale

China

  • Growth outperformance VS rest of the world should continue to widen
  • One of the strongest fundamentals amongst EMs
  • One of the best risk-reward profile amongst EMs

S. Korea

  • Equities benefits greatly from cyclicality and a Biden administration’s trade policy
  • Large exposure to chipmakers supports equity

Taiwan

  • Equities benefits greatly from cyclicality
  • Large exposure to chipmakers supports equity market
  • Successful Covid-19 management mitigates virus risks

Indonesia

  • Valuation still relatively cheap
  • Resilient economy with room for further stimulus
  • Passage of structural reforms to drive continuous appetite towards equities

Brazil

  • Valuation still relatively cheap
  • Large exposure to commodity positive for equities
  • Amongst the first and biggest beneficiary from a risk-on rally (Vaccine approval will be huge for Brazilian equities)


Table 6: Product for EM markets


The Research Team is part of iFAST Financial Pte Ltd.

All materials and contents found in this site are strictly for general circulation and informational purposes only and should not be considered as an offer, or solicitation, to deal in any of the funds or products found/identified in this site. While iFAST Financial Pte Ltd ("IFPL") has tried to provide accurate and timely information, there may be inadvertent delays, omissions, technical or factual inaccuracies and typographical errors. Any opinion or estimate contained in this report is made on a general basis and neither IFPL nor any of its servants or agents have given any consideration to nor have they or any of them made any investigation of the investment objective, financial situation or particular need of any user or reader, any specific person or group of persons. You should consider carefully if the products you are going to purchase are suitable for your investment objective, investment experience, risk tolerance and other personal circumstances. If you are uncertain about the suitability of the investment product, please seek advice from a financial adviser, before making a decision to purchase the investment product. Past performance is not indicative of future performance. The value of the investment products and the income from them may fall as well as rise. Opinions expressed herein are subject to change without notice. In respect of any matters arising from, or in connection with the said research analyses or research reports, recipients of the report are to contact IFPL at 10 Collyer Quay, #26-01 Ocean Financial Centre Building, Singapore 049315, or by telephone at +65 6557 2853. Where the report contains research analyses or research reports from a foreign research house and if the recipient of such research analyses or research reports is not an accredited investor, expert investor, institutional investor or an ex-accredited investor, IFPL accepts legal responsibility for the contents of such analyses or reports to such persons only to the extent as required by law. Please note that only certain security(ies) herein are available to all investors, while the rest are only available for certain persons to invest in, such as Accredited Investors (as defined in the Securities and Futures Act) or one who invests at least S$200,000 (or its equivalent currency) per transaction. To qualify as an Accredited Investor, one needs to submit a declaration form and certain relevant supporting documents, according to iFAST’s prevailing policies and procedures.

Please read our full disclaimers on the website at ( https://secure.fundsupermart.com/fsmone/policies/328125/investment-account-terms-&-conditions).

iFAST Financial Pte Ltd (IFPL) (registered address: 10 Collyer Quay #26-01 Ocean Financial Centre Singapore 049315, Telephone: 6557 2000) holds the Financial Advisers Licence issued by the Monetary Authority of Singapore ('MAS') to conduct regulated activities of advising on securities, marketing of collective investment schemes and arranging of any contract of insurance in respect of life policies, other than a contract of reinsurance and the Capital Markets Services Licence issued by the MAS to conduct regulated activities of dealing in securities and providing custodial services for securities. While IFPL has made every effort to ensure the independence of the report's contents, IFPL's nature of business is such that IFPL and its connected and associated entities together with their respective directors, officers and staff may be involved in providing dealing or investment-related services in the abovementioned securities, and have taken or may take positions in the securities mentioned in this report, and may also act as the principal for any buy or sell trades.

Ways to Invest with FSM Global
Why FSM Global
Don't have an account with us?
Open an account here
Need Financial Advice?
Make an appointment

We use cookies If you close this message or continue to use this site, you will consent to the use of Cookies, unless you choose to disable them. Click on our Privacy Policy to understand more.