Emerging market tag overshadows LatAm fundamentals
Reuters, Wednesday, August 12, 1998 at 15:30
By Carlos A. DeJuana BUENOS AIRES, Aug 12 (Reuters) - It's all in the name, they say, and for Latin America's stock markets the "emerging markets" tag has lately been doing more harm than good. In the last two weeks, Latin America's major stock markets have dropped over 16 percent on average as a jittery Wall Street has reeled from the latest fallout of the Asian crisis and fund managers have pulled out of anything bearing a scent of risk. But weren't Latin America's economies doing well? Reforming their banks? Making their accounts transparent? Slashing budgets and maintaining fiscal discipline, all to meet the scrutinizing criteria of U.S. investors, credit agencies and the International Monetary Fund? Yes, said Daniel Tassan-Din, head of analysis at Deutsche Bank Securities in Argentina, but Mexico, Argentina and Brazil, the major Latin American economies, still carry the "emerging markets" tag. "It doesn't matter how strong your banking system is or reforms are, you are still lumped as one type of investment. That's how funds work," he said. "Fund managers are to a great extent selling because they're forced to, because investors are pulling money out. That creates a rolling ball where prices go down, other people panic and you get these big corrections," said James Barrineau, chief Latin American strategist for Salomon Smith Barney. The most recent culprit is Japan, which has been unable to convince investors that it can jump-start its sinking economy, prompting the market to knock the yen to eight-year lows. As that occurs, investors are worried China will be forced to devalue its currency to remain competitive in the region, which could trigger a whole new slew of currency devaluations and economic chaos. For Latin America, the fear is that the new devaluations could put pressure on countries like Brazil or Argentina. A devaluation by Brazil, whose bulging fiscal deficit and tightly regulated currency make it a target for speculators, would most likely spur a regional crisis much worse than the 1994 "tequila" crisis. Should Hong Kong be forced to devalue, the markets might go after Argentina, which has a similar fixed-peg currency system. But analysts say the fear is mostly psychological, not economic. "If China devalues its currency, what is the impact on the economy in Brazil? Very small or zero," Tassan-Din said, adding that the same went for Argentina. "But there would be a big psychological impact. Unfortunately, that is what the market reflects." Either way, most analysts do not see a devaluation by Hong Kong or especially China, which has $140 billion in its foreign reserves to defend the yuan, its currency. "It would do them more harm than good to devalue. Politically, they're setting themselves up to be engine of growth for Asia. This is more psychological than economic," Barrineau said. Brazil has also said it will not devalue. It holds a foreign reserve war chest of its own worth around $70 billion and has already successfully defended its currency from the markets when it came under pressure in October. The key is to sit tight, the analysts said. "If Latin Americans don't panic and they can weather these crisis, their economies will be stronger than before. At one point, money will flow back in," Deutsche Bank's Tassan-Din said. Barrineau concurs: "Once the smoke clears, because of these reforms, Latin America is going be a much stronger market." buenosaires.newsroom@reuters.com))
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