THE world’s longest-running equity rally is
losing steam.
Malaysia’s
benchmark stock index, one of the first to begin rebounding from the global
financial crisis, capped its smallest first-half return since 2008.
The
FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI Index has gained just 0.8 percent this year, after
rising 127 percent from its October 2008 low in the longest bull market among
nations in the MSCI All-Country World Index.
Record
household debt, equity valuations that exceed the average level of the past
five market peaks and slower earnings growth at companies from Petronas
Dagangan Bhd. to Maxis Bhd. are taking the sheen off Southeast Asia’s
second-biggest stock market. While share purchases by the nation’s 587-billion
ringgit ($182- billion) pension fund support prices, money managers at Samsung
Asset Management Co. and BlackRock Inc. favor stocks in Thailand and China.
“Valuations
are too rich” in Malaysia, Alan Richardson, whose Samsung Asean Equity Fund
outperformed 96 percent of peers tracked by Bloomberg during the past five
years, said by phone from Hong Kong. “Growth prospects are constrained by high
household debt levels.”
Malaysia’s
bull market, defined as a gain of at least 20 percent without a subsequent drop
of the same magnitude from a recent high, has lasted 2,067 calendar days,
almost five times as long as the average advance since Bloomberg began
compiling the data in 1977. That compares with 1,936 days for the Standard
& Poor’s 500 Index, which has climbed about 190 percent from its March 2009
nadir.
Bull market
The
KLCI’s advance from its 2008 low is 37 percentage points bigger than the
average 19 previous bull markets. The gauge’s price-to-book ratio of 2.3
compares with a mean level of 2 at the last five rally peaks and a multiple of
1.5 for the MSCI Emerging Markets Index.
“If you
haven’t taken a position in Malaysia, you are a little bit late for the party,”
Sam Le Cornu, who helps oversee about $1 billion at Macquarie Investment
Management and has an underweight position in the country, said by phone from
Hong Kong on June 24. “We are not finding a lot of value.”
The
KLCI closed 0.1 percent higher in the final 10 minutes of trade, reversing
earlier losses of as much as 0.2 percent.
Rising
debt levels and a planned consumption tax may put pressure on Malaysian
consumers. The country’s household debt rose to a record 86.8 percent of gross
domestic product (GDP) at the end of last year, from 57 percent in 2002,
according to the central bank’s 2013 annual report.
Debt burden
The
government introduced a goods and services tax of 6 percent, which takes effect
in April 2015, to boost revenue after running a fiscal deficit since 1998. A
gauge of consumer sentiment compiled by the Malaysian Institute of Economic
Research dropped to the lowest level since March 2009 in the quarter ended
December 31.
Malaysia
is the most vulnerable country in Asia to external and financial shocks, Oxford
Economics Ltd. said in a June 2 report. At 54.6 percent, the Malaysian
government’s debt-to-GDP ratio is jointly ranked with Pakistan’s as the second
highest among 13 emerging Asian markets after Sri Lanka, data compiled by
Bloomberg show.
“The
Malaysian market will be sluggish,” said Chua Hak Bin, a Singapore-based
economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch. High debt levels will “weigh on the
property market and consumer spending.”
Malaysian
stocks get support from a steady stream of purchases by Employees Provident
Fund (EPF), the nation’s biggest state pension fund, according to Aberdeen
Asset Management Sdn.
Pension buying
The EPF
said last month that investment income surged 58 percent to 8.83 billion
ringgit in the first quarter from a year earlier, driven mainly by returns from
equity investments. About 43 percent of its funds were invested in equities, it
said in a statement.
“There’s
a lot of liquidity in Malaysia, and with the age profile of the country and
contribution to permanent savings schemes like the Employees Provident Fund, a
chunk of these funds finds its way into the equity market,” said Gerald
Ambrose, a managing director of Aberdeen Asset in Kuala Lumpur. “So it’s
perceived as a sort of a support.”
The
nation’s economic expansion has so far been resilient to higher debt levels.
GDP rose 6.2 percent in the first three months of 2014, the fastest pace in
five quarters, as a revival in global growth boosted exports. The economy may
expand between 4.5 percent and 5.5 percent in 2014, the central bank said in
March, versus 4.7 percent last year.
Earnings outlook
Malaysia’s
earnings growth is still projected to lag behind emerging-market peers. Profits
in the KLCI index will climb 5 percent in the next 12 months, versus 18 percent
for the MSCI Emerging Markets Index, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
The Malaysian gauge trades at 16 times estimated earnings, versus 11 times for
the developing-nation measure.
“My
concern is that we are being asked to buy stocks now at price-earnings
multiples and price-to-book values significantly higher than the levels of,
say, 18 months ago,” Ambrose said. “Yet there hasn’t been any increase in the
earnings outlook.”
Malaysian
stocks were downgraded to underweight from neutral on June 19 by JPMorgan Chase
& Co., which reduced its 2014 and 2015 earnings growth forecast and said
it’s less positive on consumption-driven sectors. IHH Healthcare Bhd., Asia’s
biggest hospital operator, is trading at 42 times projected 12-month earnings,
close to its highest level in seven months, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
Thailand’s Bumrungrad Hospital Pcl. has a multiple of 30, while India’s Apollo
Hospitals Enterprise Ltd. trades at 33.
Market laggards
Astro
Malaysia Holdings Bhd., Malaysia’s largest pay-TV operator and the best
performer on the KLCI this year, has a multiple of 30, compared with 17 for BEC
World Pcl., Thailand’s biggest publicly traded broadcaster.
For
BlackRock’s Andrew Swan, this year’s advance in developing-nation stocks, which
sent the MSCI Emerging Markets Index to a 4.8-percent gain, is another reason
Malaysian shares are losing their appeal. He says investors tend to view the
country as a “defensive” bet that holds up well in market downturns while
lagging behind in rallies.
The
world’s largest money manager doesn’t have “a lot of exposure” in Malaysia,
Swan, the Hong Kong-based head of Asian equities at BlackRock, which oversees
about $4.1 trillion, said on June 24 in Hong Kong. “When Asian markets and
emerging markets are rising, Malaysia tends to underperform, which is what’s
happening again this year.”
Business & Investment Opportunities
Saigon Business Corporation Pte Ltd (SBC) is incorporated
in Singapore since 1994.
No comments:
Post a Comment