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Pakistan offers ideal business opportunities: WSJ report

So has this "overwhelming trend" actually resulted in an increase in FDI? Any figures? Taking an interest is very easy, actually putting up the money is the real test.

ISLAMABAD: There is an overwhelming trend of the well-reputed companies to invest in Pakistan, owing to the ideal business opportunities offered by the government.

According to a Wall Street Journal (WSJ) report, the Frontier Markets Sentiment Index (FMSI) shows the growing interest of international companies to do business in the country.The survey says Pakistan is ahead of the pack in terms of the number of companies newly taking an interest in it.

Sentiment toward the South Asian nation of 183 million people improved by 5.6 percentage points, putting it ahead of Africa’s rising stars: Nigeria and Kenya, which each saw sentiment improve by just over four percentage points, says the FMSI. The report was published in WSJ on June 6, 2014.

The FMSI, created exclusively for the WSJ by Washington DC-based advisory firm Frontier Strategy Group (FSG), tracks the level of interest shown by major European and American multinational companies in countries across the world.

By contrast, Pakistan’s South Asian neighbours Bangladesh and Sri Lanka appear to be losing their appeal, with each seeing the number of companies focused on them slashed by more than a half, says the sentiment index.

The index is based on information collected from FSG’s roughly 200 multinational clients, which include companies such as Coca Cola, General Electric, Novartis, Dell and Akzo Nobel. Matt Lasov, FSG’s global head of advisory and analytics, explains how the index works: “We collect data about which countries the companies are watching for potential future investment. Over time, that gives us a clear picture of their market priorities, which countries they’re including in their future plans and which they are dropping.”

The research provides two key insights: the current state of sentiment toward countries in the frontier markets, and the change in sentiment over time.Corporate sentiment is calculated as the percentage of companies that include a particular country on their watch-list. If 50 of the 200 companies are keeping an eye on a particular country, the sentiment index score would be 25 percent.

Leading global companies increasingly investing in - thenews.com.pk

Comparisons to Nigeria and Kenya (Boko, Al Shabaab, TTP) - I would say that the overall outlook has worsened when Pakistan should be grouped among a different set of countries by now rather than among whom its being grouped with.
 
Until the security situation and energy crisis are resolved, no sane investor would even spit in our direction.
For one off event, the investors do care, but if it becomes frequent, they just ignore it considering it a "usual business"
The government is counting on investors to look beyond the short-term headlines when they consider putting money into Pakistan. Jonathan Wood, a global analyst at risk consultancy Control Risks, believes they will do just that. “The attack on Karachi airport should have minimal impact on investors’ confidence in Pakistan,” Wood said. “You have long-term operators there who are used to this kind of event and they won’t be affected.”

Abhijit Kukreja, director for equity sales at Asian-frontier-markets-focused brokerage Decker & Co., says foreign fund flows to Pakistan show that investors are unshaken by the sporadic violence the country experiences. “Every now and then, when the government tries to shake the roots a bit, you’ll get some Taliban extremists doing this sort of thing but it doesn’t affect investment flows.”
According to Kukreja, average daily inflow volume has quadrupled over the past year.

Albert Yuen, a portfolio manager at New York based fund manager LR Global, says investors are no longer rattled by such events. “We’ve seen a lot of activity from the Taliban but the market has really shrugged it off,” he said.
Pakistan’s UBL Sale Tests Investor Confidence After Airport Attack - Frontier Markets News - Emerging & Growth Markets - WSJ
 
SLAMABAD - The investors are heading to Pakistan to benefit from a newly elected business-friendly government that is rolling out an economic programme to aid the struggling economy, the Wall Street Journal reported.
In its report published, the American daily said the benchmark index traded in the financial capital Karachi jumped 49.4pc last year, ranking as one of the world’s top performers. The market jumped another 2.8pc Thursday, the first trading day of 2014. The report said the rally is also part of a broad move by money managers, willing to take on high risks in frontier markets across the globe on hopes of juicy returns that beat traditional emerging markets. That bet paid off handsomely in 2013 with countries including Argentina, Venezuela and Vietnam also scoring big gains although they also have a history of volatile movements and sudden declines.
The report observed that the catalyst in Pakistan was the election in May of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz led by Nawaz Sharif, a business-friendly politician. It is the first time in the nation’s history an elected government has handed over power to another, raising expectations for improved political stability.
Flows from foreign investors into Pakistan reached $283 million from the beginning of May, the month of the election, to the end of 2013, according to the National Clearing Company of Pakistan. Global investors have also snapped up Pakistani government bonds with yields, which move inversely to prices, falling to 7.54pc recently from as high as 11.69pc in April on the 10-year bond.
In a further sign of growing confidence, the government said last month it is also aiming to sell billions of rupee debt aimed at the Pakistani diaspora. A spokesman for the finance ministry said there is currently no specific timeframe on the issuance of the bonds.
It said that the optimism stems from the government paying off $5 billion in debt that was weighing on the energy sector, freeing up funds at fuel importers and power producers and distributors. The country also agreed to a long-term bailout loan of at least $6.6 billion from the International Monetary Fund to avoid a potential balance of payments crisis. The government has in addition announced a far reaching privatization programme which will include the national airline and electricity producers. The energy move was important given the country is plagued by electricity shortages, while the oil and gas sector accounts for nearly a third of the benchmark index in Karachi. The largest company on the index, energy firm Oil and Gas Development Co. rose 43.5% last year. “Given that the general impression of the new government has been corporate friendly that is a very strong factor that made people more optimistic about Pakistan,” said Mattias Martinsson, chief investment officer and partner at fund company Tundra Fonder in Stockholm, which runs a $30 million Pakistan fund.
For all the gains however, the market is small with the market capitalization of the companies listed in Karachi at around $52 billion, according to securities firm Foundation Securities research. That compares to neighboring India where the companies on the Bombay Stock Exchange are valued at around $1.1 trillion.
“Pakistan as a market has very many companies that are trading below their fair value, but as it goes you get distracted by other more important markets,” said Arnout van Rijn, chief investment officer at Robeco Asia Pacific in Hong Kong, who manages the $1.2 billion Robeco Asia-Pacific Equities fund.
The market has been up since the end of 2008 however, with shares soaring 329pc to the end of 2013 - despite the country being hit by terrorism, the economy nose-diving and Karachi suffering law and order situation during that period.
Some investors say that those companies that survive both a weak economy and regular violence throughout the country are well run, resilient and especially appealing. Unilever Pakistan Foods Ltd, a unit of the consumer goods giant, shot up 116pc last year. “When you have to deal in this kind of environment, I think you have to be extremely good as management to deal with it and survive,” said Thomas Vester, fund manager at Lloyd George Management, who runs the firm’s frontier market investments, and manages assets worth $656 million as of Oct. 31.
And the relative political stability now is encouraging more investors to focus on the country whose population of around 180 million makes it the sixth most populous country in the world and a potential draw for those betting on rising incomes and more consumer spending. The market remains cheap even after the strong run-up earlier this year - currently trading at over nine times trailing 12 month earnings - a common valuation measure used by stock analysts. “Pakistan has a fairly diverse economy with a large and young population that needs to be fed and supplied basic infrastructure such as electricity,” said Caglar Somek, global portfolio manager at Caravel Management in New York, which manages around $650 million.
“If you find the companies that supply those basic needs, growing at double digit with high profitability, you can buy them at valuations that are on average 30pc to 40pc cheaper than their emerging market peers,” said Mr. Somek.

Stability luring investors to focus on Pakistan: WSJ
 
It said that the optimism stems from the government paying off $5 billion in debt that was weighing on the energy sector, freeing up funds at fuel importers and power producers and distributors.

It is said? How about saying the truth:

Power sector close to collapse under Rs513.37 billion debt - thenews.com.pk

Amid the unprecedented power shortages of over 7,000MW, Pakistan’s power sector receivables have risen to a whopping Rs513.368 billion in the first 10 months of the current financial year 2013-14, threatening collapse of the entire system.
 

or against the wishes of PTI
do you guys prey to Allah that Ya Allah tomorrow i dont hear any good news about Pskistan.
Ya allah there is more chaos so PTI have a chance in next election
Ya allah pakistan to tabah ker dey PMLN ke under ta key PTI jeet sakey next election
do you, do you?
I think you do, maybe in not same words, maybe not after namaz prayers but there is this wish deep down every PTI supporter.
 
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There's some potential for equity managers and risk takers to make some margins there - if they are upto it and are short term investors and go on low volume.

Though most of those markets are very volatile, some of them have surely seen increase in stock prices lately.
 
or against the wishes of PTI
do you guys prey to Allah that Ya Allah tomorrow i dont hear any good news about Pskistan.
Ya allah there is more chaos so PTI have a chance in next election
Ya allah pakistan to tabah ker dey PMLN ke under ta key PTI jeet sakey next election
do you, do you?
I think you do, maybe in not same words, maybe not after namaz prayers but there is this wish deep down every PTI supporter.

Are you delusional and you think that the rest of the world is running to visit Pakistan?
Are you a another delusional person who believes that all is fine in Pakistan?
Are you happy to see the current levels of incompetence and corruption in Pakistan?
Are you aware of the almost daily terrorist attacks?
Are you aware the world compares Pakistan to failed states such as Afghanistan, Somalia and Sudan?
 
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Are you delusional and you think that the rest of the world is running to visit Pakistan?
Are you a another delusional person who believes that all is fine in Pakistan?
Are you happy to see the current levels of incompetence and corruption in Pakistan?
Are you aware of the almost daily terrorist attacks?
Are you aware the world compares Pakistan to failed states such as Afghanistan, Somalia and Sudan?

well then your wishes come true
 
well then your wishes come true

No my wish is for Pakistan to be stable and a prosperous nation. Pakistan where all minorities are safe so that I can return to my homeland.
 

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