This $217 Billion Quant Says Forget China, Buy Frontier Markets

This $217 Billion Quant Says Forget China, Buy Frontier Markets

(Bloomberg) -- Emerging market indexes are becoming ever-more concentrated in east Asia. That isn’t necessarily a good thing for investors that track these benchmarks, according to Parametric Portfolio Associates LLC.

A better strategy is to reduce weightings to big countries like China so as not to be too exposed to just a few places, and look to the likes of Kenya and Sri Lanka for a more balanced geographic allocation, according to Parametric, a systematic fund manager overseeing $216.6 billion of assets for parent Eaton Vance Corp.

“The default portfolio is very concentrated in Asia right now,” Paul Bouchey, co-chief investment officer at Parametric, said in a phone interview on Wednesday. “We’re definitely going farther afield” to diversify.

Parametric believes that recent changes have left investors too exposed to Asia, and MSCI’s plans to quadruple its current holdings of Chinese A-shares in its emerging-markets index will exacerbate the issue. The combined weighting of China, South Korea and Taiwan in the MSCI EM gauge is about 53 percent as of Feb. 28.

Parametric is underweight all three of those markets and makes up the difference in smaller countries, Bouchey said.

The fund manager is looking at Saudi Arabia, which currently exists in a standalone category and will be included in MSCI’s emerging index later this year. He also mentioned Kenya and Sri Lanka, both considered frontier markets, and Eritrea, which is not categorized by MSCI at all.

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In theory, investors who evenly balance allocations by market capitalization should be rewarded with a risk premium, said Puneet Singh, head of Asia-Pacific equity quant research at Societe Generale in Hong Kong.

“In general, equal weighting outperforms cap weighting simply because you are taking on more cap risk and liquidity risk,” he said. “Theoretically, this concept extends to countries as well.”

Whether this strategy pays off in practice is another matter.

“The equal-weight strategy outperforms cap-weight version when small caps outperforms large caps,” said Shanle Wu, quantitative analyst for Asia-Pacific at UBS Investment Research, in an email. But the strategy hasn’t paid off recently, she added.

Total returns from the Parametric Emerging Markets Fund have lagged its benchmark by about 30 percentage points during the past decade, though its performance has beaten some of the biggest emerging market exchange-traded funds, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. An implementation of the strategy which uses tax-loss harvesting and other methods to minimize its trading costs consistently outperformed the MSCI EM Index until 2017.

SocGen’s Singh said that moving to equal weighting by country in Asia usually boosts performance over the capitalization-weighted benchmark, though 2018 was an exception, as large-cap stocks outperformed smaller companies.

“This is partly to do with potentially a shift of the investment process to utilizing more index/country level instruments rather than single-stock instruments.” Singh expects equal-weighting strategies to perform better this year.

Bouchey said the equal-weight strategy was likely to generate higher compounded returns over time. The approach would have had limited exposure to technology stocks during the dot-com bubble, even if it may have looked “foolish” to be underweight at the time, he added.

“It’s a little bit of a contrarian strategy,” Bouchey said. “It’s not going to be trending with the market.”

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

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