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Strategies & Market Trends : Telebras (TBH) & Brazil -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: djane who wrote (7562)9/5/1998 1:28:00 PM
From: Rohit Nanavati  Respond to of 22640
 
djane, Thanks a lot.
RN



To: djane who wrote (7562)9/5/1998 6:53:00 PM
From: djane  Respond to of 22640
 
Tiny Latin America Markets Hold Their Own

latimes.com

Saturday, September 5, 1998

Bloomberg News


Sometimes it pays to be small and live in out-of-the-way places.
While Sao Paulo's Bovespa index has plunged 42% in dollar
terms this year as foreign investors fled Latin America's biggest market,
3,200 miles to the northwest in Panama City the general index has jumped
56%. Perhaps more impressive, the Panama index has scarcely dipped in
recent weeks as emerging markets worldwide took a nose dive.
The same pattern holds in Costa Rica, Guatemala and El Salvador, all of
whose markets have climbed since the beginning of the year.
"Overall, Central America and Panama are providing a safe harbor in
world financial markets," said Antonio Villamil, president of the Washington
Economics Group, a consulting firm in Miami.
These tiny markets are thriving on the absence of foreign investors. Their
shareholders are mostly locals who are comfortable in the knowledge they
understand local prospects and see no reason to panic because of events an
ocean away. No worry here over what might happen if China devalues the
yuan.
"It's not like in Brazil or Mexico, where large amounts of foreign money
have come in, and then left, because of the problems in Russia and Asia,"
said Raul Lacayo, president of the Nicaraguan Securities Exchange.
Stocks in Costa Rica have risen 100% in 1998 in dollar terms, according
to an index compiled by Costa Rica's BCT Valores brokerage, making it the
world's best-performing index so far this year, according to Bloomberg
data. Panama's general stock index is up 56.5%, ranking it No. 2.
Meanwhile, Central America's richer neighbors are languishing. Chile,
Brazil, Venezuela, Colombia, Mexico and Argentina are home to six of the
world's 10-worst-performing markets, soured by concern about weakening
Asian currencies, falling oil prices and Russia's decision last month to
devalue its currency and default on its ruble debt.
There's one very good reason why big foreign investors shun Central
American markets--they're too small.
Foreign institutions typically buy and sell large amounts of shares and
may need to get into or out of a stock quickly. That's not an option in a small
market where trading volume is low.
Much of this year's gains stem from local optimism about the region's
growth prospects.
"We are entering a period of peace, of stability, of democracy,"
Nicaragua's Lacayo said. "With that stability now you can see a discrepancy
in price [between Central America and South America] and in relative
returns."

Copyright 1998 Los Angeles Times. All Rights Reserved