SALOMON SMITH BARNEY
EQUITY
RESEARCH:
GLOBAL
Global Asset Allocation
July 16, 2001
Reasons for Global Investing
Five Good Reasons to Invest Globally
► Many opportunities exist outside the United
States. Currently, there are 3,702 companies
globally with capitalizations of $1 billion or more,
1,774 of which are outside of the U.S. Many of
these are highly profitable and have attractive
valuations and high earnings growth.
► Since many industries are competing globally, in
order to invest In the best company in an
industry, one has to set one's Investment
universe globally.
► Regional leadership In terms of returns tends to
vary over time. Since 1984, a strategy of
Investing solely in the regions that had
outperformed in the past five years would have
done poorly.
► Diversification benefits from investing abroad
still exist.
► Emerging markets offer a unique opportunity to
invest In an asset class selling at a discount to
developed markets.
Reasons for Global Investing July 16, 2001
Global Investing
The Efficient Frontier
During the early 1990s, many investors became convinced that international investing was a good idea after seeing the data displayed in Figure 1. This figure shows the "efficient frontier" (risk/return curve) for different combinations of U.S. and international investing between January 1977 and December 1990. International investing is represented by the EAFE Index, which is an index of developed markets, excluding the United States and Canada. The efficient frontier curve shows the pattern of higher return and reduced risk that was the backbone of the arguments for investing abroad up through the mid 1990s. For example, if one invested 60% in the United States and 40% in EAFE rather than investing 100% in the U.S. market, one could not only have achieved a higher return (15. 1 % versus 13. 1 %) but also have lowered the volatility of returns (14. 1 % versus 15.8%). However, between January 1991 and June 2001, a shift occurred in the "efficient frontier," as shown in Figure 2. During this period, the EAFE Index underperformed the U.S. market, and if one invested 60% in the United States and 40% in EAFE, rather than achieving a higher return, one would have achieved a lower return (12.2% versus 16.0%). Therefore, some have questioned the rationale for investing abroad.
To further clarify: Some of the reason the EAFE Index underperformed the U.S. market during that period was that Japan, which was a large part of the EAFE Index, had a zero annualized return from January 1991 through June 2001. This can be seen in Figures 3 and 4, which display the returns in U.S. dollars and local currency of fourteen of the largest global markets for this time period. Although the larger European markets (France, Germany, Italy, and the UK) had a lower return than the United States when measured in U.S. dollars, they had local currency returns that were very similar to those of the United States.
Reasons for Global Investing July 16, 2001
In spite of the recent unattractive risk/return tradeoff between the U.S. and EAFE markets, we believe there are still many reasons to invest globally. This report looks into some of the considerations that favor global investment today.
Reasons for Global Investing July 16, 2001
Reasons for investing Globally
There are five strong reasons for investing globally. They include:
1 Number of opportunities,
2 Global competition,
3 Regional performance differences,
4 Diversification, and
5 Emerging market opportunities
Number of Opportunities
An investor should not be cut off from opportunities in a larger global marketplace. In terms of regional comparison, companies outside the United States represent about 50% of the world's capitalization (see Figure 5). Currently, there are 3,702 companies around the globe with market capitalizations of $1 billion or more. Out of these companies, 1,774 are based outside the United States. The number of these companies with forecasted earnings growth greater than 15% compares favorably with the number in the United States. Figure 6 indicates the number of these companies both inside and outside the United States with forecasted earnings growth greater than 15%.
Reasons for Global Investing July 16, 2001
Figure 6. Number of Companies with Forecasted Earnings Growth Greater than 15%
(Market capitalization greater than $1 billion as of July 3, 2001)
Region Number of Companies
UNITED STATES 406
NONU.S. 495
EUROPE 265
JAPAN 180
AUSTRALIA/HK/SINGAPORE 50
Source: I/B/E/S.
With Global Competition in Many Industries, Investments Should Not Be Limited to U.S. Companies
Many companies in the United States are faced with competition from abroad, as well as at home. The American automobile industry revamped production practices after imports from Japanese carmakers such as Toyota, Honda, and Subaru became widely chosen by consumers. General Motors, for example, set up its Saturn division with the motto of "a different kind of car company" in response to consumer demand for reliable, quality compact cars. In the retail industry, the Swedish company Hennes and Maurtiz has positioned itself in the American marketplace with affordable, trendsetting apparel that rivals the Gap and Abercrombie and Fitch. In the pharmaceuticals arena, Novartis and AstraZeneca are the two biggest players in an industry that thrives on researchdriven innovation and where the successful placement of new drugs onto the marketplace becomes key for growth. Within telecom equipment, the Finnishbased Nokia and the Swedishbased Ericsson compete with the U.S.based Motorola for the handset market. Within the chemical industry, BASF and Akzo Nobel are two chemical companies that have
Reasons for Global Investing July 16, 2001
shown an ability to grow at rates faster than the underlying industry. These are just a few examples in the growing global competition in certain sectors.
Diversification Is Important Because Regional Leadership in Performance Tends to Change over Time
During the past 25 years, a strategy of investing only in those markets that had performed well during the previous five years would have performed poorly. As can be seen in Figure 7, during 198488, Japan was the bestperforming market, with an annualized U.S. dollar return of 45%, followed by Europe, with an annualized U.S. dollar return of 26%. During the subsequent five years, 198993, Japan was the worstperforming region, returning 7% in U.S. dollars. During this same period, Latin America became the bestperforming region, with a 44% annualized U.S. dollar return, followed by emerging Asia, with a 29% annualized U.S. dollar return. Between 1994 and 1998, Japan continued as a poorperforming region, returning 4% in U.S. dollars. However, the emerging markets that were the bestperforming regions in the previous five years had a dismal performance, with Latin America returning 2% in U.S. dollars and emerging Asia returning 18% in U.S. dollars. For the two years of 1999 and 2000, in fact, no region achieved a higher return.
One cannot predict 100% in advance where in the world's the highest and the worstperforming regions will be.
Opportunities for Diversification Still Exist by Investing Abroad
One concern about investing abroad has been that the U.S. market and foreign markets have been moving more in tandem over the last few years. When we measure the risk of combining different asset classes, we not only measure the volatility of each asset class but also the degree of correlation between the asset
Reasons for Global Investing July 16, 2001
classes. The lower the correlation between the asset classes, the lower the overall volatility of the portfolio made up of the asset classes for a given level of volatility of each asset class. In fact, as Figure 8 shows, the correlation of the U.S. market with EAFE markets has been increasing since 1998.
There are several reasons for this increased correlation. One of the reasons is greater synchronization globally on a macroeconomic level. Since 1998, central bankers around the world have, in general, enacted similar monetary policies. During the late 1990s, we saw the development of the European Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) and the introduction of the euro, which, together, have produced a more uniform monetary policy for Europe.
Another factor has been the globalization of certain industries, such as the technology, media, and telecom (TMT) sectors. The bursting of the TMT bubble had a global impact because it simultaneously affected companies in Europe, Asia, and the United States. In recent years, the practice of crosslisting stocks on multiple exchanges has become more common, which has also led to greater correlation. One last reason is the phenomenon dubbed the "CNN effect," whereby people all over the world have roundtheclock access to financial news and can act on information at the same time.
If the correlation between markets remains at these high levels, the riskreduction argument for international investing could be compromised. We continue to think there will be two reasons why the diversification story will continue to hold. First of all, the correlations of the United States and foreign markets might not remain at the very high levels seen in the last several years. They could drift somewhat lower in the future, since most countries continue to have separate monetary and fiscal policies, and the magnitude of the TMT bubble will probably not be seen again. Secondly, as Figure 9 shows, the 36month correlations starting in April 1998 between the U.S. market and different sectors in different regions around the world vary greatly. The correlations have been calculated in local currencies in order to
Reasons for Global Investing July 16, 2001
take out the exchangerate effect. As can be seen, the correlations range from 0. 17 (U.S. market and cyclical conglomerates in Australia and New Zealand) to 0.71 (U.S. market and Latin American telecoms). Of course, investments should be made only if the opportunity for attractive returns exists, but Figure 9 shows that lowcorrelation opportunities still exist globally. Thus, we believe investment abroad remains a viable diversification strategy as long as a range of different sectors as well as regions are taken into account.
Many Opportunities Exist in the Emerging Markets
The sharp rebound of the emerging markets in 1999 from the lows reached during the devastating financial crises of 199798 had induced many investors to take a second look at that asset class. Then the emerging markets fell once again in 2000 as concerns grew about the coming slowdown in the G7 economies, and the selloff in global technology led investors to shun virtually all assets perceived to be of higherthanaverage risk. Now, once again, many investors are concerned that the returnrisk relationship in the emerging markets may be chronically unfavorable. A glance at the historical returns and risks presented in Figure 10 goes far in explaining these apprehensions. Since December 1987 (the date at which the MSCI's Emerging Markets Free Return Index begins), returns on emerging market equities have been higher than those on stocks in the developed markets, but the variability in returns has also been higher, making the riskadjusted returns on emerging markets substantially lower than those in the developed markets.
Reasons for Global Investing July 16, 2001
Figure 10. Returns and Risks in the Emerging and Developed Markets, December 1987June 2001
Average Return Volatility
Emerging Markets 11.8% 23.9%
Developed Markets 9.7% 14.2%
Emerging Market returns measured using the MSCI Emerging Market Free index; developed market returns are measured using the MSCI World index. The volatilities are annualized standard deviations ofmonthly returns.
Source: MSCI.
If anything, the figures on performance over the past 14 and one half years mask the massive losses investors would have incurred over fairly short periods of time. Between Thailand's devaluation of the bhat in mid 1997 and the collapse of Russia's markets in August 1998, for example, MSCI's Emerging Markets Free Index fell by 55%. In August of 1998 alone, investors in the emerging markets would have lost 32%. As can be seen in histograms of monthly returns shown in Figures 11 and 12, extreme returns both positive and negative are far more likely in the emerging markets than in the developed markets. Moreover, emerging markets are likely to remain volatile, if only because they are small relative to the size of potential crossborder flows. Argentina's market capitalization of about $24 billion, for example, is small relative to the estimated $3.5 trillion in overseas equities held by investors in the United States, the United Kingdom, Japan, and Germany as of the end of 2000. Even small changes in investors' allocations to markets such as Argentina can generate flows that are massive relative to the size of those markets.
Reasons for Global Investing July 16, 2001
Despite this volatility, there are a number of reasons to believe that the riskreturn relationship in the emerging markets will be more favorable in the future than it has in the recent past. These are:
Returns Since December 1987 Are Unlikely to Be a Reliable Guide to LongTerm Relationships Between Returns and Risk In the Emerging Markets
Judgments about the returns and risk that can be expected for a given asset class are typically based on data spanning a long period of time. Ibbotson Associates, for example, uses data beginning as far back as 1926 in seeking to uncover the relationships between return and risk for stocks, bonds, and Treasury bills in the United States.1 The reason for looking at performance over a long period of time is to include most or all of the major types of events that investors have experienced and may experience in the future. In this light, the 14 and one half years for which consistent return data are available for the emerging markets are a small sample. Moreover, the sample ends just after a down year (2000) in those markets. Under such circumstances, judgments based on historical measures of returns and risks can be seriously misleading as guides to future performance.
The Acceleration of Growth in the Emerging Markets Should Result in Strong Equity Market Performances
Real economic growth in developing countries is expected to decelerate this year with the slowdown in growth in the advanced economies (see Figure 13). The deceleration in growth in the emerging markets, which was anticipated late last year, is one of the reasons that the emerging markets declined in 2000. The consensus among economists is that emerging Asia and Latin America will by 2002 resume growing at rates similar to those achieved before the onset of the global financial crisis in 1997 (see Figure 14).