Stock Market ‘Bubble’ to End, Morgan Stanley Says (Update2)
Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) -- The global stock market rally, which
resembles the bull run between 2003 and 2007, will end as
government spending slows after so-called easy money boosted
asset prices, according to Morgan Stanley.
“Such echo rallies are never as big as the original one
and we will see it fading away,” Ruchir Sharma, 35, who
oversees $25 billion in emerging-market stocks at Morgan
Stanley, said in an interview in Mumbai. “The rally will end as
the effects of the stimulus begin to fade and the credit bubble
caused by easy money disappears.”
The MSCI Emerging Market Index, which tracks shares in
developing markets, has surged 59 percent this year, set for its
biggest annual advance since 1993, as governments poured in $2
trillion and central banks cut interest rates to near zero to
kick-start their economies. Last year, the measure dropped 54
percent, its worst run in the gauge’s 20-year history.
A new rally globally needs to be driven by new industry
groups, he added, while the current advance is led by the same
sectors, such as commodities, as the ones in the bull market
that ended in 2007. That’s not a good sign, he said.
The emerging-market index fell 1.3 percent to 904.64 as of
5:10 p.m. in Mumbai, a four-week low, after the Standard &
Poor’s 500 Index lost 2 percent to 1,042.63 yesterday, the
steepest drop since Oct. 1. Sharma, the New York-based head of
emerging markets, said he expects the S&P 500 to trade in a
“long-term” range of 800 to 1,200 in the next couple of years.
Pessimistic Outlook
Markets globally dropped last year following the biggest
financial crisis since the 1930s as the bankruptcy of Lehman
Brothers Holdings Inc. and writedowns from subprime debt caused
a seizure in lending.
Only 31 percent of respondents to a poll of investors and
analysts who are Bloomberg subscribers in the U.S., Europe and
Asia see investment opportunities, down from 35 percent in the
previous survey in July. Almost 40 percent in the latest
quarterly survey, the Bloomberg Global Poll, say they are still
hunkering down. U.S. investors are even more cautious, with more
than 50 percent saying they are in a defensive crouch.
“The doubt and the pessimism just won’t go away,” said
James Paulsen, who helps oversee $375 billion as chief
investment strategist at Wells Capital Management in
Minneapolis. “They’re still so shell-shocked by what they went
through despite the improvement in the market and the economy.”
Earlier Forecast
Sharma predicted in May 2006 that emerging markets will
post further gains. The index for developing nations has risen
20 percent since then, compared with a 16 percent drop in the
MSCI World Index.
The commodity-producing nations will be the hardest hit
when the current rally ends, Sharma said. The Latin American
markets of Brazil and Chile are the most expensive, he said, and
Morgan Stanley is also “underweight” on Taiwan, Malaysia,
Israel and Russia. Commodity prices are rising even as economic
fundamentals are deteriorating, he added, a sign that the rally
may be fizzling.
“Commodities are at the centre of this echo bubble,” he
said, adding that they are “in substantially overvalued
territory, way above fundamentals.”
Inventories of oil, copper, aluminum have risen over the
past few months even though demand hasn’t picked up, Sharma
said, adding that the price of oil is inversely correlated to
the U.S. dollar. Increasing buying of commodities as a hedge
against the decline in the U.S. dollar has resulted in the
commodity rally, he said.
‘Irrationality’
“The greatest degree of irrationality is in commodities,”
Sharma said. Morgan Stanley owns a lower percentage of commodity
stocks, including metals, materials, energy and industrials,
compared with the benchmark index. It holds a higher percentage
of financial and consumer stocks including automobiles,
retailers and beer companies.
Some brokerages are predicting further gains in equities.
The emerging markets benchmark stock index may retest its “life
high” by next year, helped by economic growth and gains in
credit markets, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co.
The optimism is shared by Mark Mobius, who oversees about
$25 billion as executive chairman of Templeton Asset Management
Ltd. The investor said this month he expects developing nations’
shares to surpass previous records, predicting a continued rally
with “corrections along the way.”
Emerging Markets
Emerging markets make up all 10 of the world’s best-
performing markets, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Russia’s dollar-denominated RTS Index has been the world’s best-
performer this year after climbing 112 percent.
Morgan Stanley is “overweight” on India, Indonesia,
Poland, the Czech Republic, Turkey and Thailand, as it’s betting
on economies that are driven by domestic demand. India,
Indonesia and the Czech Republic are among the few countries
that will end the year with earnings per share growth at all
time highs, while countries like Russia and Taiwan will see
corporate profits climbing back to their peaks in 2012, Sharma
said.
Some markets may be hurt by the diversion of government
stimulus away from the economy and into stocks and other
investments. Central banks globally were hoping the funds would
result in an increase in credit growth, driving the economy.
That remains weak in most countries, Sharma said.
“Liquidity has found its way to the wrong assets,” he
said. “You can take a horse to the water but can’t force it to
drink.”
To contact the reporters on this story:
Pooja Thakur in Mumbai at
pthakur@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: October 29, 2009 07:57 EDT