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BRICS crumble as commodity prices bite

Pho­to: Ahmet Bolat/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

When Jim O’Neill, a for­mer chief econ­o­mist at Gold­man Sachs, con­jured up the idea of the “BRICs” in 2001, it was a neat enough con­cept. Chi­na, a new addi­tion to the World Trade Organ­i­sa­tion, was just start­ing its inex­orable rise, while India and Brazil, burst­ing with human and min­er­al resources, were show­ing signs of ful­fill­ing their man­i­fest poten­tial. Rus­sia, after the untold mis­eries of the 1990s, was emerg­ing into the light, under the aegis of a new pres­i­dent.

To O’Neill, it made sense to clump these four giant emerg­ing mar­kets into a sin­gle, neat, investor-friend­ly acronym. As it turned out, plen­ty of oth­ers thought the same way. Most finan­cial research gets filed away or, at best, men­tioned in pass­ing by jour­nal­ists look­ing to place the com­plex­i­ties of the glob­al econ­o­my in con­text. This paper, bear­ing the dusty title of Build­ing Bet­ter Glob­al Eco­nom­ic BRICs, changed the world, at least for a while.

BRICs was a buzz­word, but it had a basis in fact. The four coun­tries were large, polit­i­cal­ly sig­nif­i­cant in their respec­tive regions and grow­ing fast.“These coun­tries were all set to be the world’s fastest grow­ing economies in the decades to come, and togeth­er they could form a pow­er­ful eco­nom­ic bloc,” says Hisham Hal­bouny, man­ag­ing direc­tor at Man Cap­i­tal, the asset man­age­ment arm of Cairo-based Man­sour Group.

Invest­ment banks rushed out research and data that aimed to prove the point; fund man­agers, investors and jour­nal­ists lapped it up. The acronym became real. In March, Brazil’s long-sim­mer­ing polit­i­cal dis­con­tent boiled over into mass protests, call­ing for the impeach­ment of Pres­i­dent Rouss­eff as an eco­nom­ic cri­sis, pre­cip­i­tat­ed by falling com­mod­i­ty prices, bites. Her pre­de­ces­sor, Luiz Iná­cio Lula da Sil­va, who presided over the country’s growth spurt, is fac­ing charges of cor­rup­tion.

crude oil price

Rus­sia entered a reces­sion last year, hit by the oil price crash and inter­na­tion­al sanc­tions imposed in 2014 after Moscow annexed Crimea.

China’s econ­o­my is slow­ing as glob­al demand for its prod­ucts wanes and as the per­son­al debt that fuelled its con­sumer boom mounts up. South Africa, whose addi­tion to the group meant that the low­er­case “s” was cap­i­talised in 2010, has had a tur­bu­lent 18 months of drought, pow­er cuts and polit­i­cal blood­let­ting, exac­er­bat­ed, again, by falling com­mod­i­ty rev­enues. Only India remains rel­a­tive­ly unscathed.

The acronym was prob­a­bly already on its last legs — Gold­man Sachs closed its loss-mak­ing BRIC fund last Novem­ber, hav­ing seen its assets dwin­dle to $98 mil­lion (£68.5 mil­lion), from $842 mil­lion at its peak — but for a while, the idea real­ly did deliv­er.

From 2001 to 2014, China’s econ­o­my grew by an aver­age of 9.9 per cent a year, India’s by 7.4 per cent, Russia’s by 4.1 per cent, and Brazil’s by 3.4 per cent. The finan­cial cri­sis was a blip in Brazil, Rus­sia and South Africa, but while Britain’s econ­o­my con­tract­ed by 4.2 per cent in 2009, China’s swelled by 9.2 per cent, with India not far behind.

The dis­par­i­ty can be seen over the last year and a half. Coun­tries like Brazil and Rus­sia, which depend on com­modi­ties, have had a ter­ri­ble time

Polit­i­cal­ly, the five coun­tries bought into the idea — albeit to dif­fer­ent extents. Since 2009, they have held sum­mits to talk about their shared inter­ests. In 2014, they band­ed togeth­er to cre­ate their own devel­op­ment bank, a com­peti­tor to the US-head­quar­tered World Bank.

For investors, emerg­ing mar­kets seemed to offer out­sized returns at only mar­gin­al­ly extra cost and risk to the punter. In time, investors start­ed to cast around for new toys to play with. O’Neill invent­ed the “MINTs”, a clus­ter of Mex­i­co, Indone­sia, Nige­ria and Turkey, also known as the “next row” of BRICS. Then HSBC got involved, dream­ing up “CIVETS”, a con­coc­tion of bustling fron­tier mar­kets rang­ing from Colom­bia to Viet­nam.

In hind­sight, the implo­sion was inevitable. As Sun Glob­al Invest­ments CEO Mihir Kapa­dia says: “The dis­par­i­ty can clear­ly be seen over the last year and a half.“The coun­tries like Brazil and Rus­sia, which depend on com­modi­ties, with the fall in prices have had a ter­ri­ble time. Why have the com­modi­ties fall­en? One of the oth­er BRIC coun­tries, Chi­na, reduced its over­all con­sump­tion.”

And as growth slowed in the emerg­ing world, investors start­ed notic­ing the bare patch­es and burn marks. Brazil’s state-dom­i­nat­ed econ­o­my; India’s aver­sion to for­eign cap­i­tal; the fact, accord­ing to Stephen Parr, a senior invest­ment man­ag­er at Aberdeen Asset Man­age­ment, that “qual­i­ty com­pa­nies are thin on the ground in Rus­sia and main­land Chi­na”.

BRICS, then, may fall out of use — its imi­ta­tors nev­er real­ly caught on — but a cur­so­ry read over bank research reports shows that econ­o­mists are still search­ing brave­ly for new acronyms. Whether any will stick is a dif­fer­ent mat­ter. As Man Capital’s Hal­bouny says: “The invest­ment com­mu­ni­ty start­ed real­is­ing that cram­ming very dif­fer­ent coun­tries into a sin­gle invest­ment umbrel­la did not make much sense.”

Family values

The economies of the BRICS were nev­er real­ly very sim­i­lar, and their dif­fer­ences have only grown

BRIC economies

Brazil

Exports
Iron ore: 13.5%
Soy­beans: 9.0%
Crude oil: 5.3%
GDP 2001: $1,600 bil­lion
GDP 2016: $3,300 bil­lion

Brazil had a dif­fi­cult 2015, as con­tin­u­ing low prices for iron ore and oil drove down the val­ue of its cur­ren­cy and dent­ed gov­ern­ment spend­ing. This year polit­i­cal chaos has gripped the nation, which also faces a giant bill for the Olympic Games.

Russia

Exports
Crude oil: 35%
Petro­le­um: 17%
Nat­ur­al gas: 14%
GDP 2001: $1,600 bil­lion
GDP 2016: $3,500 bil­lion

Russia’s econ­o­my is heav­i­ly depen­dent on oil and gas exports, and the col­lapse in prices in 2014 and 2015 has gut­ted its rev­enues. Sanc­tions, imposed after the country’s annex­a­tion of Crimea, have added a fur­ther ele­ment to its cri­sis.

South Africa

Exports
Gold: 18%
Dia­monds: 8.3%
Plat­inum: 6.8%
GDP 2001: $350 bil­lion
GDP 2016: $740 bil­lion

South Africa’s econ­o­my is rel­a­tive­ly diver­si­fied, and its cur­rent eco­nom­ic tur­moil has many roots. How­ev­er, the coun­try is a major exporter of met­als, and a tough mar­ket for plat­inum and oth­er min­er­als has added to its chal­lenges.

China

Imports
Crude oil: 13%
Iron ore: 5.8%
PCBs: 8.9%
GDP 2001: $3,700 bil­lion
GDP 2016: $21,000 bil­lion

China’s export-dri­ven econ­o­my sup­plies devel­oped mar­kets with man­u­fac­tured goods. Its rapid growth meant it con­sumed vast quan­ti­ties of raw mate­ri­als; its loom­ing slow­down has tor­pe­doed the mar­ket for those com­modi­ties.

India

Imports
Crude oil: 32%
Gold: 8.6%
Coal: 3.4%
GDP 2001: $2,100 bil­lion
GDP 2016: $8,700 bil­lion

India is the last of the BRICS to fall into a slump. The country’s eco­nom­ic growth has been dri­ven large­ly by inter­nal con­sump­tion, and the low oil price has reduced the cost of its imports, but its steel­mak­ers are suf­fer­ing from falling prices.