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After the BRICs, it's time to focus on the VARPs

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After the BRICs, it's time to focus on the VARPs
Tim Love, Investment Director for Emerging Market Equities, GAM
Friday, 2 Dec 2016 | 4:54 AM ETCNBC.com

Emerging market equities were mostly wrong-footed by the US presidential election result. If President-elect Donald Trump follows through on his pledge to scrap certain trade and regulatory agreements, free trade and emerging markets could suffer.

In this highly uncertain environment, it's key to focus on the emerging economies' domestic drivers which will shape this so-called new world order.

Since the BRICs acronym was coined over a decade ago, it has gripped investors and news headlines alike. But with the traditionally perceived growth engines of Russia and Brazil in the midst of various phases of recession, as well as fundamental policy overhaul taking place in China, investors need to find pockets of opportunity in other frontier markets: Time to introduce VARP.


VARP – Vietnam, Argentina, Romania and Pakistan – represents a collection of geographies, languages, histories and business cultures with one thing in common: they each offer major growth opportunities. The VARP economies are characterized by strong economic growth, all within the 3 percent-6 percent range, with a young demographic of workers keen to spend money.

Pakistan
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Asif Hassan | AFP | Getty Images
Pakistani stock brokers watch the latest share prices during a trading session at the Pakistan Stock Exchange in Karachi on September 29.
Pakistani stocks have soared this year following an announcement from the MSCI that its equities will be included in the emerging markets index.

Improving credit ratings on the back of healthy economic growth, more manageable inflation and the government's efforts towards fiscal consolidation have heightened investor interest in Pakistan. The country is also benefiting from numerous infrastructure projects under development as part of the $46 billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor.

Vietnam
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Chau Doan | Light Rocket | Getty Images
Hai Phong port in Hai Phong, Vietnam on July 1, 2015.
Similar to Pakistan, Vietnam's close proximity to China has meant its economy has also benefited from China's infrastructure roll-out program, making it an attractive investment destination.

Vietnam's economy expanded at an annual rate of 6.4 percent in the third quarter of 2016, buoyed by rising foreign direct investment and exports – the country is the top producer of robusta coffee, used to make instant coffee. Manufacturing also gathered pace.

Additionally, Vietnam's fast growing middle class means that its appetite for buying protein items such as milk is soaring as the population becomes increasingly health-conscious. As a result, we see the country's dairy sector as an interesting investment space.

Romania
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Walter Bibikow | Getty Images
Bucharest, Romania
In the past two decades Romania has come out of economic turmoil and morphed into a destination for foreign direct investments, including European Regional Development Funds.

Representing a typical 'convergence play' into the European Union, Romania is perceived as a less risky investment as it assimilates into the economic fundamentals and values of Europe.

And finally...Argentina
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Leo La Valle | AFP | Getty Images
Argentine peso bills
For more than a decade, Argentina was cut off from international capital markets after the peso was massively devalued, leaving its economy brittle and with a plethora of international debts to settle. But the current pro-business government is aiming to restore Argentina's global reputation as an investment destination through various overhauls of the public sector and economic administration of the country.

Argentina's President Mauricio Macri has already attempted to overhaul the country's electricity sector – he continues to push for the removal of subsidies to allow electricity companies to charge for energy at rates closer to the cost of production. We believe that once the country manages to iron out its issues of recession and currency volatility, its banking and electricity sectors could be poised to strongly benefit.

VARP equity markets are becoming increasingly liquid and accessible to investors. While Argentina is currently benefitting from a tax amnesty on capital repatriation and is in the process of removing capital controls, Vietnam, Romania and Pakistan are easy to access locally through cash or derivatives.

To be sure, these economies face risks: Vietnam and Pakistan are dependent on the speed of Chinese developments; a stronger US dollar may hurt Argentina's commodity-based exports, and a slower EU integration would affect Romania. However, these individual risks are unlikely to materialise simultaneously given their low correlation to each other.

The VARP economies are over 13 times smaller than BRICs and therefore we do not expect them to help drive the global economy in the same way, or to generate the same levels of returns for investors. However, these frontier markets add a deeper dimension to an emerging markets portfolio with potential attractive risk returns – because of their diversity.

Tim Love is investment director for emerging market equities at GAM. You can follow him on Twitter @GAMinsights

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Am sorry but BRICS wasn't just about economic growth, it was also about the size of the market, population, resources and the power that these countries will wield in the future.

VARPs or the next 11 or any other concatenation, isn't the same.
 
Am sorry but BRICS wasn't just about economic growth, it was also about the size of the market, population, resources and the power that these countries will wield in the future.

VARPs or the next 11 or any other concatenation, isn't the same.

Moreover BRICS proved its mettle much before the term was coined. Investors witnessed the opportunity and then pushed for open market approach for BRICS what is there in Pakistan now? Apart from Vietnam I don't see a contender I would have preferred Algeria over Pakistan any day.
 
With Brazil ,South African & Russian economies in recession ,India and China fighting for regional one can safely say BRICS is over
 
Opportunity for massive growth also exists in Afghanistan, Syria, Iraq and many other places which have been levelled ti the ground by fighter bombers. But opportunity for growth doesn't = Actually growing and attracting. For that matter Vietnam should not be considered as a part of this concatenation since it's far far ahead in terms of economic potential.

Moreover BRICS proved its mettle much before the term was coined. Investors witnessed the opportunity and then pushed for open market approach for BRICS what is there in Pakistan now? Apart from Vietnam I don't see a contender I would have preferred Algeria over Pakistan any day.
You have made the most crucial observation as to why BRICS is what it is. My thought was exactly this.
 
In a report titled, After the BRICs, it’s time to focus on the VARPs, the CNBC says that after Trump’s desire to create a so-called new world order, free trade and emerging markets in BRICS could suffer.

Investors now need to find pockets of opportunity in other frontier markets: Time to introduce VARP.

VARP – Vietnam, Argentina, Romania and Pakistan – represents a collection of geographies, languages, histories and business cultures with one thing in common: they each offer major growth opportunities, says CNBC.

The VARP economies are characterised by strong economic growth, all within the 3 percent-6 percent range, with a young demographic of workers keen to spend money.

Will economy be a worry too? In a recent country assessment, London’s The Economist Intelligence Unit predicts that government expenditure and CPEC infrastructure investment will support economic growth.

In another piece in The Washington Post, titled Beyond the headlines of terrorism, Pakistan’s economy is on the rise, the writer says: A bullishness has led Pakistan to enter the emerging-markets acronym vernacular. One of the latest post-BRICS acronyms of rising economies making the rounds: VARP, for Vietnam, Argentina, Romania and Pakistan. Yes, that Pakistan.

Pakistan is now world’s 40th largest economy. It is set to become 18th largest economy in the world by GDP in 2050, according to Goldman Sachs, which coined BRICS.

By GDP PPP, Pakistan is set to become 20th largest economy in 2030 and 16th largest by 2050, according to a recently released Long View report by PwC.

IMF and World Bank have predicted Pakistani economy to grow by 5.3 percent and 5.2 percent respectively.

This growth optimism resonates with other independent forecasts by Harvard’s CID and BMI Research UK for the next 10 years.
 

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