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‘Final frontier boosts returns’

Invest­ing in emerg­ing mar­kets – the pre­cur­sor to fron­tier-mar­ket invest­ing – has pro­vid­ed a solu­tion to the chal­lenges of low returns since the mid­dle years of the 19th cen­tu­ry.

In the 1868, the For­eign and Colo­nial Invest­ment Trust (FCIT) became the first pooled vehi­cle to allow investors access to more exot­ic and high­er-yield­ing invest­ments. Back then, it was stuffed with what would now be called emerg­ing mar­ket bonds. The invest­ment trusts that fol­lowed in FCIT’s wake had a sim­i­lar emerg­ing mar­ket bias, with the Unit­ed States a par­tic­u­lar­ly favoured des­ti­na­tion.

All these years lat­er and many for­mer emerg­ing mar­kets, includ­ing the US along with more new­ly “emerged” mar­kets such as the so-called BRICs – Brazil, Rus­sia, India and Chi­na – have entered the invest­ment main­stream for both bond and equi­ty investors. But just like the 1860s, albeit for dif­fer­ent rea­sons, the search for both enhanced returns and addi­tion­al port­fo­lio diver­si­fi­ca­tion has con­tin­ued unabat­ed.

Accord­ing to some invest­ment strate­gists and man­agers so-called “fron­tier mar­kets” could be well-placed to pro­vide a suit­able solu­tion.

Fron­tier mar­kets per­formed well in 2012 – and have so far this year – in both absolute and rel­a­tive terms. Notably they out­per­formed “con­ven­tion­al” emerg­ing mar­kets. The MSCI Fron­tier Mar­kets Index, which con­sists of 25 “fron­tier mar­kets”, pro­duced a return of 7.48 per cent dur­ing Jan­u­ary 2013, com­pared with the 1.39 per cent returned by the MSCI Emerg­ing Mar­kets Index. Over one year, the MSCI Fron­tier Mar­kets Index gen­er­at­ed a return of 16.76 per cent com­pared with the 8.01 per cent record­ed by the MSCI Emerg­ing Mar­kets Index.

Con­sumers in emerg­ing and fron­tier mar­kets look set to become the prime source of equi­ty mar­ket returns

Unfor­tu­nate­ly, the longer-term record is not quite so good, at least as mea­sured by the MSCI indices. Over the pre­ced­ing three, five and ten-year time peri­ods to the end of Jan­u­ary 2013, fron­tier mar­kets post­ed returns of 6.75 per cent, ‑9.21 per cent and 8.93 per cent respec­tive­ly. This com­pares to 7.5 per cent, 2.35 per cent and 17.1 per cent returned from emerg­ing mar­kets over the same time peri­ods.

In addi­tion, fron­tier mar­kets trail many devel­oped mar­ket indices. The MSCI World Index pro­duced three, five and ten-year returns of 10.88 per cent, 2 per cent and 8.96 per cent, for exam­ple.

It should be not­ed, of course, that the MSCI Index does not ful­ly rep­re­sent the entire uni­verse of equi­ty mar­kets falling with­in the def­i­n­i­tion of “fron­tier mar­kets”. Fron­tier mar­kets are defined as investible mar­kets that have both low­er mar­ket cap­i­tal­i­sa­tion and liq­uid­i­ty than the more devel­oped emerg­ing mar­kets.

Nonethe­less, the argu­ment for fron­tier mar­kets doesn’t look quite so com­pelling, even if some of them are among the fastest grow­ing economies in the world.

Sam Vecht, the lead man­ag­er of Black­Rock Fron­tiers Invest­ment Trust, which had around $146.2 mil­lion (£92.3 mil­lion) of assets under man­age­ment at the end of Jan­u­ary 2013, cites com­pelling rea­sons for equi­ty investors, espe­cial­ly rel­a­tive to con­ven­tion­al mar­kets.

He says: “Fron­tier mar­kets not only pro­vide much bet­ter val­ue in terms of com­pa­ny val­u­a­tions, they also offer much bet­ter div­i­dend yields.

“Fron­tier mar­ket com­pa­nies, focused on domes­tic growth, often trade at sin­gle-dig­it mul­ti­ples. For emerg­ing mar­ket com­pa­nies, the mul­ti­ples can often be as much as 25 times earn­ings.

“In part, this stems from the fact that the glob­al-investor uni­verse has yet to dis­cov­er fron­tier mar­kets. Ded­i­cat­ed emerg­ing mar­ket invest­ment funds cur­rent­ly hold around $850 bil­lion of assets. But ded­i­cat­ed fron­tier mar­ket invest­ment vehi­cles hold around $10 bil­lion.”

Inter­est­ing­ly, fron­tier mar­kets can also be less volatile than emerg­ing mar­kets. Mr Vecht says this is because they have been far less affect­ed by big glob­al events, such as investor con­cern about the impli­ca­tions of a US fis­cal cliff. Also there is a much big­ger uni­verse of firms to con­sid­er drawn from a huge­ly var­ied set of mar­kets. This is espe­cial­ly the case for investors like Mr Vecht whose invest­ment uni­verse is not con­strained by any par­tic­u­lar index.

Cit­ing spe­cif­ic exam­ples, Mr Vecht’s invest­ment case for fron­tier mar­kets is con­vinc­ing.

He explains: “There are some very excit­ing oppor­tu­ni­ties avail­able in mar­kets like Iraq, for exam­ple, where despite the obvi­ous chal­lenges, the risk-return trade-off looks very com­pelling.”

How­ev­er, oth­er pro­fes­sion­al investors offer addi­tion­al rea­sons for con­sid­er­ing this sec­tor as a poten­tial addi­tion to a port­fo­lio. There are sec­u­lar rea­sons for sug­gest­ing that fron­tier mar­kets should pro­vide much greater oppor­tu­ni­ties in the years ahead for investors.

Accord­ing to ana­lysts at HSBC this stems from the fact that con­sumers in emerg­ing and fron­tier mar­kets look set to become the prime source of equi­ty mar­ket returns. This is espe­cial­ly the case for coun­tries like Chi­na, which is attempt­ing to bal­ance its econ­o­my away from its depen­dence on exports and infra­struc­ture invest­ment to high­er con­sumer spend­ing.

The good news for fron­tier mar­kets, accord­ing to HSBC, is they have a much big­ger rep­re­sen­ta­tion of con­sumer-fac­ing seg­ments than emerg­ing mar­kets (60.1 per cent of mar­ket cap­i­tal­i­sa­tion ver­sus 43.6 per cent).

In addi­tion to BlackRock’s Fron­tiers invest­ment trust (IT) there are a num­ber of Lon­don-list­ed vehi­cles that pro­vide both diver­si­fied and sin­gle-coun­try expo­sure to fron­tier mar­kets.

Both the Black­Rock Fron­tiers IT and Advance Fron­tier Mar­kets Fund (ADMF) pro­vide diver­si­fied expo­sure to the uni­verse: the for­mer pri­mar­i­ly by invest­ing in sin­gle secu­ri­ties, the lat­ter by adopt­ing a fund of funds approach. Lon­don-list­ed sin­gle-coun­try fron­tier mar­ket funds pro­vide expo­sure, inter alia, to Qatar, Ukraine and Viet­nam.

There are also emerg­ing mar­ket closed and open-end­ed funds that pro­vide diver­si­fied expo­sure to fron­tier mar­kets from long-estab­lish­ment invest­ment man­age­ment hous­es, such as Aberdeen Asset Man­age­ment, Fideli­ty, Franklin Tem­ple­ton and JP Mor­gan Asset Man­age­ment. If none of these take your fan­cy, RBS also offers a Lon­don-list­ed index linked cer­tifi­cate that tracks the MSCI Fron­tier Mar­kets Index.

WHERE ARE THE FRONTIER MARKETS?

The 25 con­stituent coun­tries of the MSCI Fron­tier Mar­kets Index are Argenti­na, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Bul­gar­ia, Croa­t­ia, Esto­nia, Jor­dan, Kaza­khstan, Kenya, Kuwait, Lebanon, Lithua­nia, Mau­ri­tius, Nige­ria, Oman, Pak­istan, Qatar, Roma­nia, Ser­bia, Slove­nia, Sri Lan­ka Tunisia, UAE, Ukraine and Viet­nam.