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Housekeeping and plumbing - Investability of Emerging Markets Sara Zervos Financial Sector Operations and Policy Department The World Bank.

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Presentation on theme: "Housekeeping and plumbing - Investability of Emerging Markets Sara Zervos Financial Sector Operations and Policy Department The World Bank."— Presentation transcript:

1 Housekeeping and plumbing - Investability of Emerging Markets Sara Zervos Financial Sector Operations and Policy Department The World Bank

2 OPD 2003 Introduction What have we been trying to do? Ù Identify factors, which impact the “investability” analysis of foreign portfolio investors Macro versus micro Attractiveness versus fundamental access decision How have we done this? Ù Interviews with different types of investors and various functions with importance for the investment process

3 OPD 2003 Investor Sample Number of institutions. Europe / US Dedicated and cross-over Large and small, internal and external funds Functions: country risk managers, portfolio managers, network managers, back-office managers Selection bias: “fixed income, hard currency, large”

4 OPD 2003 Focus of presentation The “investability” criteria The investment process The “investable” universe The importance of domestic capital markets

5 OPD 2003 The “Investability” criteria The universe goes from “Calpers” to “opportunistic hedge funds” (from rules to discretion) Ù Dedicated EM investors: very few have explicit internal “investability” criteria, use of a model Ù Cross-over investors: often limit the investable universe by credit rating Ù Hedge funds: no explicit limits In reality: many driven by (formal or informal) benchmarks

6 OPD 2003 The Investment Model / Process The risk model: Ù Input:Quantifiable data and Non-quantifiable data Ù Output: Score of risk to expected returns Investment process: Ù 1) crunch numbers => 2) add non-quantifiable factors => 3) adjust score with subjective analysis

7 OPD 2003 The “investable” universe “Must” invest: countries with more than 5% weight in “the” index “Can’t” invest: Ù countries on the US State Department blacklist “May” invest: Ù Countries that are not too small and not too poor

8 OPD 2003 “Must” Invest Category Countries with more than 5% weight in benchmark More scope for illiquid investments in large countries Weights (%)0-55-1010+ EMBI Global2803 EMBI Global diversified 2362 ELMI+1680

9 OPD 2003 “Can’t” Invest Category Countries the U.S. has comprehensive sanctions against: (currently: Iran, Iraq, Libya, Sudan, Burma and Cuba). Countries sanctioned by the UN. Client driven clauses: scores especially related to minimum human rights, labor rights and judiciary. Minimum plumbing requirements: physical settlement, custodian requirements, and back-office capabilities

10 OPD 2003 “May” Invest Category Is there something to buy / sell? Is it worth spending resources to research? Ù Too small, too poor Ù “Too successful” to be attractive to dedicated EM managers Plumbing: how long, how easy to get in? (and out!) Have fingers been burned (recently)?

11 OPD 2003 The hunger for information The hunger for data: Ù Bottoms up: firm level data, input to assess firm profitability Ù Top down: country level data, input to models assessing macro and political risk The hunger for quality: regularly published quality historical data. The hunger for access to public officials

12 OPD 2003 Size matters Size of country: very few Goldilocks’ “just right” Size of issue (Minimum issue size set by:) Ù secondary market liquidity requirements Ù contribution to portfolio performance Ù contribution to diversification Size of investor: Ù Smaller investors buy small issues

13 OPD 2003 The importance of domestic markets Local investor base Ù As information providers Ù As liquidity providers (also last resort) Ù As alternative providers of financing for the government Quality of overall financial system

14 OPD 2003 Summary Few explicit restrictions on dedicated EM portfolio investors. Many implicit restrictions: from benchmarks, from size, from plumbing, from housekeeping Some double standards

15 OPD 2003 What can emerging markets do? Housekeeping/transparency: Provide timely reliable data Provide access to officials Provide clear information about changes in the legal and regulatory environment Plumbing: fix basic leaks in the plumbing. [Just to minimum not first world standards]


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