Emerging Market Equity: A Sustainable Source of Income and Growth

Emerging Market Equity: A Sustainable Source of Income and Growth
As of December
November
2014 31, 2013
Alison Shimada
Portfolio Manager, Emerging Markets Equity
Executive summary
 Dividend paying equities have offered superior returns with lower levels of risk historically across global equity markets
 Higher yielding equities in emerging markets offer investors exposure to high levels of growth and income; a unique
investment opportunity
 Traditional bond investors are providing tailwinds to dividend yielding equities in emerging markets in the near to medium term
 Economic convergence between developed and emerging economies is encouraging improvements in corporate governance
that will sustain yields in emerging markets in the long term
Introduction
The once overlooked dividend has received renewed interest
in recent years. Investors have rediscovered the compelling
risk-return attributes of the stocks that pay them. The focus
of research on this topic has been primarily on developed
market equities. In this paper, we present a case for investing
in higher-yielding equities in emerging markets.
Before we discuss emerging markets specifically, we can make
some general observations regarding dividend yielding equities
globally. Some of the most complete historical data available
on the variance in performance among higher- and loweryielding stocks can be found in the Center for Research in
Security Prices (CRSP) U.S. stock database. Figure 1 shows
the cumulative total returns of four broad portfolios of U.S.
stocks from July 1927 through December 2013, formed and
rebalanced annually based solely on levels of dividend yield.1
The data reveal a strong direct relationship between total
return and yield, producing vast differences in terminal value
over long time horizons.
Figure 1: Growth of $1 With Dividends Reinvested
July 1927 through December 2013
$100,000
$10,803
$5,840
$2,123
$1,379
$10,000
$1,000
$100
$10
$1
$0
1927
1932
1937
1942
1947
1952
1958
1963
1968
1973
1978
1983
1988
1993
1998
2003
2008
2013
High Dividend Yield
Low Dividend Yield
Source: Kenneth French Data Library, CRSP
Medium Dividend Yield
Non-Dividend Payers
Not only have higher yielding portfolios produced higher
total returns, they have demonstrated lower realized levels of
volatility across a number of relative and absolute risk measures.
Accompanying statistics for the U.S. equity portfolios are
referenced in Figure 2 shown below.
Figure 2: Performance Statistics – U.S. Equity
7/1927-12/2013
NonPayers
Low Medium High
Yield
Yield Yield
Risk Free
Rate
Market
Annualized Return
8.69
9.23
10.51
11.30
3.49
9.77
Annualized Stnd. Dev.
30.17
19.79
17.96
20.08
0.88
18.79
Sharpe Ratio
0.17
0.29
0.39
0.39
0.00
0.33
Annualized Alpha
-0.99
-0.35
2.78
5.69
-
-
Beta
1.48
1.01
0.92
0.96
-
-
Source: Kenneth French Data Library, CRSP
The U.S. findings are not anomalous. A study conducted by
Morgan Stanley Research produced similar results across
several markets.3 The charts on the next page show the
relative performance among equity portfolios formed based
on quintiles of dividend yield across the United States, Europe,
Japan, and emerging markets (quintile 1 is the highest yielding
quintile). Each portfolio reveals a strong direct relationship
between total return and dividend yield. Importantly, the
relationship was strongest in emerging markets.
Explanations of the total return-dividend yield
relationship
The strength of this relationship has generated several
explanations in the academic research. Because dividend yield
is a well-established style metric, discussions of the total
return-dividend yield relationship are often framed in the
broad context of value and growth investing. There is a healthy
and long-running debate on whether higher relative returns
on value stocks (generally higher dividend payers) primarily
reflect a rational risk premium, or whether investors are influenced by irrational biases that cause them to systematically
overprice growth stocks and underprice value stocks.4,5 We
acknowledge the merits of both arguments, but we believe
there is an important factor that is often lost within the
debate; corporate governance. We argue later in this paper
that corporate governance, particularly in emerging markets,
is a critical factor in determining the quality of a company’s
dividend policy and its return potential.
Emerging market equities offer growth and income
It is important to highlight another distinction about emerging economies. By definition, they experience higher secular
growth rates than developed economies. Strong growth
creates a very fertile environment for the profitable investment
of capital. For this reason, it is intuitive that dividend payout
ratios are relatively lower in emerging markets as companies
3.5%
3.0%
2.5%
2.0%
1.5%
1.0%
0.5%
0.0%
-0.5%
-1.0%
-1.5%
Figure 3b: Best relative performance in Europe comes
from stocks with DY in quintiles 1 & 2
8.0
6.0
4.0
2.0
0.0
-2.0
-4.0
-6.0
-8.0
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q1
Q5
Figure 3c: Best relative performance in Japan comes
from stocks with DY in quintile 1-2
6%
5%
4%
3%
2%
1%
0%
-1%
-2%
-3%
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q5
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q5
Figure 3d: Best relative performance in EM comes
from stocks with DY in quintile 1
Median 12m relative performance
Median 12m relative performance
Price multiples are generally lower in emerging markets,
producing cheaper valuations with respect to book values,
earnings, cash flows, and dividend levels (e.g., long-term
average P/E multiples are nearly 20% less than the long-term
world average).7 All other things equal, lower valuations
result in elevated dividend yields (dividends/price). Thus, a key
takeaway is that investors holding dividend paying stocks in
emerging markets are rewarded through both strong growth
and attractive dividend yield—a compelling combination that
is difficult to find elsewhere.
Median annual relative
performance since 1997 (%)
Median 12 relative performance
Figure 3a: Best relative performance in U.S. comes
from stocks with DY in quintile 2
steer profits into capital expenditures. The long-term average
payout ratio of 35% in emerging markets is substantially below
that of developed markets (i.e., 52% in Europe and 56% in
the U.S.).6 Yet, with lower payout ratios in emerging markets,
it seems counterintuitive that dividend yields are similar to
or greater than those offered in developed markets. What is
the explanation?
6%
4%
2%
0%
-2%
-4%
-6%
-8%
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q5
Source for 3a-3d: FactSet, IBES, MSCI, Morgan Stanley Research
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Investors are focused on yield
Exposure to both growth and income is critical for generating
superior total returns in emerging market equities. However,
the income component of emerging market equities has
attracted more attention lately, even from traditional bond
investors who are failing to find suitable yields in global fixed
income markets. In 2012, a record high $1.1 trillion in government and corporate debt was underwritten in emerging
markets.8 Dividend yields in emerging market equities are
now comparable to bond yields, generating spillover demand
to the equity space.
Several yield-focused equity products have been introduced
to capture these so called “bond refugees.”9 A substantial
portion of these offerings has taken the form of exchange
traded products, with dividend-focused ETF issuance accelerating
throughout 2012 and into 2013.10 While yield-focused flows
have been and will likely continue to be a tailwind for emerging
market equities in general, investors should be cautious of
passive yield-based approaches that neglect proper diversification or scrutiny of company fundamentals. Common pitfalls
are discussed below.
Concentration risks
Emerging market equity strategies that emphasize yield can
favor elevated exposures to low growth sectors (i.e., utilities,
telecoms), partially explaining the rich relative valuations in
the crowded defensive sectors today (i.e., the “expensive
defensives”).11 But as the chart below indicates, meaningful
dividend yields can be found across sectors, including more
attractively valued cyclical sectors.
Figure 4: Emerging market equity dividends by sector
MSCI EM Financials
MSCI EM Energy
MSCI EM T/cm Svs
Figure 4 reveals another pitfall to making a naïve market
allocation to dividend yield; over half of all dividends paid are
generated by companies from only three sectors. This level of
sector concentration introduces common factor risks to the
portfolio. One need only look back to the 2008-2009 financial
crisis to understand that heavy financial sector exposure
decimated equity portfolios across global markets. Moreover,
dividend yields can vary widely by country, making a naïve
country allocation to yield a similarly dangerous exercise.
Yield traps
Even if investors avoid the portfolio level risks discussed
above, they would be remiss to neglect the company-specific
risks associated with very high yields.
Dividends are paid from cash flows that are ultimately
sustained by company earnings. If the market anticipates
weakening earnings prospects and re-prices a stock, the
resulting higher yield may simply portend a dividend cut. In
a similar vein, if a payout ratio rises gradually over time or is
too high for a company’s prospective earnings growth, this
may reflect harvesting of the asset base, putting dividend
sustainability at substantial risk in the longer term. While
dividend increases represent a strong signal of management’s
confidence in earnings sustainability, dividend cuts are usually
accompanied by sudden, large capital losses for shareholders.
This underscores the need for active, fundamental analysis to
guide security selection.
Some of the new product trends in the market may be
subjecting investors to one or more of the above risks.
We believe that both portfolio-level and security-level risks
must be actively managed, particularly in light of the inherent
transparency and transactional inefficiencies that still exist
in emerging markets.
Yet change is afoot. There are important developments that
have quietly been reshaping the landscape in emerging economies for some time. Their cumulative effects will present a
paradigm shift for how investors view emerging markets and,
consequently, will change corporate management behaviors.
MSCI EM Materials
MSCI EM IT
MSCI EM Cons Staples
MSCI EM Cons Discr
Trailing DY (%)
MSCI EM Industrials
MSCI EM Utilities
% contribution to total
market dividends (IBES FY1)
MSCI EM Health Care
0.00
10.00
Source: IBES, MSCI, Morgan Stanley Research
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20.00
30.00
40.00
Emerging economies are less emerging
than before
Emerging economies have traditionally been starved of capital
investment. Capital-to-labor ratios have been low in comparison
to those of developed economies, making marginal returns to
3
capital investment very high historically. Rapid industrialization
has produced strong returns to capital in the past 26 years.
The MSCI Emerging Markets Index has generated a 12.12%
annualized return since its introduction in 1988, outperforming
the MSCI World Index by 4.18% annually.12 But continuous
capital investment has also brought the capital base in emerging
economies into greater equilibrium with developed economies.
The flood of capital into emerging markets recently has
hastened this.
Corporate management teams are increasingly recognizing
these structural developments in their investment plans and
their use of cash. Figure 5 illustrates how more companies in
emerging markets are returning capital to shareholders. This
presents a tailwind for dividend-focused investment approaches.
In contrast, cheap labor is increasingly scarce. Chinese wages
increased nearly 20% annually in the past decade!13 Competition has pressured labor costs, eroding profits to the point
where relocation of certain labor-intensive industries to lower
cost centers or frontier markets is prudent (e.g., moving textile
factories from China to Cambodia).14 At the other end of the
spectrum, multinationals in more capital-intensive industries
are increasingly shifting some production back to developed
economies as logistical and labor cost advantages decline. Thus,
labor markets are also coming into greater equilibrium.
A new focus on capital efficiency
The structural changes outlined above will present challenges
to old growth strategies and open up new growth strategies.
For example, higher wages are producing rapid wealth accumulation among a burgeoning middle-class, creating strong growth
opportunities in consumption-driven sectors. But the net
effect of economic convergence is likely slower overall growth
in emerging economies going forward.
Figure 5:The rise of emerging market dividend payers
(% of stocks paying dividends)
100
MSCI EM
Yet some management teams cling to obsolete growth strategies.
In the next section, we discuss some factors that may pressure
some of these holdouts to change course.
We are seeing evidence of overinvestment in emerging markets
today which has, no doubt, been perpetuated by the wall of
capital inflows discussed above. Capex-to-depreciation ratios
are close to 200%—near all-time highs.15 Emerging market
payout ratios are about 4% below their long-term average.16
Aggregate investment statistics do not differentiate between
good and bad investment, but clearly there is evidence of strong
overall expansion into a soft global growth environment.
However, we believe there are forces at work that will
support greater payouts in coming years.
Figure 6: Borrowing capacity in emerging markets is high
Net debt / equity (%)
World
80
EM
70
60
50
40
MSCI DM
30
90
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
1999
70
2000
20
80
Source: CLSA Asia-Pacific Markets
Increase in number of companies paying
dividend within EM augurs well for future
dividend contribution to total returns
60
50
Source: Factset, CLSA Asia-Pacific Markets
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13A
12A
11A
10A
09A
08A
07A
06A
05A
04A
03A
02A
01A
00A
99A
98A
40
Figure 6 illustrates corporate deleveraging that has occurred
steadily over the past decade. The cost of debt service has
declined rapidly with central bank policy accommodation, and
overall debt ratios are now conservative in emerging markets.
Corporate bond markets in emerging economies have grown
rapidly, providing a needed complement to bank financing. We
expect debt ratios have ample room to increase in coming
4
years. Astute management teams can reduce their cost of
capital, increase payouts to shareholders, and streamline the
balance sheet.
Balance sheet bloat has largely been the result of profits piling
up as retained earnings. It is the misuse of retained earnings
that should concern investors (i.e. allowing cash to idle on the
balance sheet or making capital expenditures that do not earn
their cost of capital). Slower global growth has brought both
profit margins and revenues under pressure,17 particularly in
industries that have global excess capacity (i.e., the old growth
strategies). Additional investment in these areas destroys capital.
management should have incentive packages that align with
investors, including meaningful exposure to gains and losses.
Ownership structure
The quality and independence of the board of directors is also
critical, particularly in environments with significant levels of
cross-ownership, undisclosed owners, or government ownership, as is often the case in emerging markets. Careful attention
should be paid to non-market incentives of other owners, and
any special relationships between corporate management and
the board. How dependent is the company on non-controlling
shareholders? How have the property rights and objectives of
minority shareholders been treated historically?
Figure 7:The DuPont Model illustrates capital efficiency
ROE
Profit Margin
Net Income/
Net Income/
Equity
Sales
=
X
Asset Turnover
Sales/
Total Assets
Leverage
X
Total Assets/
Equity
The answer for management teams with bloated balance
sheets is to return more cash to shareholders in the form
of dividends or share buybacks. The evidence points to higher
payouts and greater capital efficiency that will ultimately
reward share prices.
Payout is part and parcel of corporate
governance
The optimal payout ratio is company specific. There is room
for well-run low growth or high growth firms to achieve
superior returns. To do so consistently, corporate management
must match dividend policy to rational levels of capex. This
is easier said than done. Investors must assess not only the
company’s lines of business and their competitive prospects,
but also whether management is likely to make decisions in
the best interests of shareholders. We believe that the most
important indicator of optimal management behavior is
corporate governance.
Quality of management
Quite simply, does the management team have the ability
and incentive to make the right investment decisions and
execute on them? Investors should look for education, level
of experience, relevant work history, and a track record of
business success that are comparable to world-class competition. Investors should measure the consistency and integrity
of management communications to shareholders. Corporate
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Special considerations
Corporate governance often reflects local market traditions.
Investors may have traditionally demanded higher payouts as
compensation for hyperinflation (i.e., Latin America). Institutional
investors in Chile and South Africa have demanded income.
Corporations in Brazil are required to pay out 25% of profits
as dividends.18 Family-controlled companies may have a tradition of high payouts to maintain lifestyle. Are these traditions
impacting the optimal management of the company?
Functioning capital markets instill discipline
We close with a final thought regarding our optimism for
improved governance in the future. Major companies that
operate in emerging economies must increasingly access
global capital markets, encouraging, sometimes forcing, the
adoption of certain developed market governance and reporting
standards. Global standards trickle down to smaller competitors.
This trend is part of the overall confluence between emerging
and developed economies that we have highlighted above.
The rewards to compliance are high, as cost of capital declines
commensurately with disclosure and good governance
practices—a very important motivator in the face of rapidly
increasing global competition. For this reason, we are optimistic
about governance trends and the return prospects available in
emerging market equities going forward.
Conclusion
The outperformance of dividend paying stocks in developed
markets, like the U.S., has long been recognized. More recently,
investors are beginning to discover the advantages of dividend
paying stocks in emerging markets. Investors have traditionally
looked to emerging markets for growth, but payouts have
5
increased in recent years as emerging market economies mature
and secular growth moderates. Today, emerging markets
feature many companies with attractive prospects for growth
and sustainable income—an exciting opportunity for total
return investors.
The highest yielding stocks in emerging markets have received
heavy investor flows lately, subjecting some investors to low
growth prospects, elevated concentration risks, and a lack
of adequate issuer scrutiny. An active approach can mitigate
these risks and identify those dividend paying companies with
the most attractive growth opportunities.
The outlook for higher payouts to shareholders is positive,
as high corporate profits, low debt, and cheap credit have
expanded balance sheet size and liquidity. The appropriate
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payout ratio is determined by market-imposed improvements
in capital discipline and the quality of corporate governance.
Increased payouts signal commitment to minority shareholders,
proactive cash management, and management’s assessment
of improved earnings prospects. As such, increased payouts
reflect shareholder-friendly governance and are correlated
with positive stock price performance.
Total return income strategies in emerging markets have the
potential to outperform across the business cycle, providing
both income to dampen volatility and growth into an economic
expansion. Opportunities are ample across sectors and
countries. Total return investors in emerging market equities
will likely benefit from the trends outlined in this paper well
into the future.
6
Alison Shimada
Portfolio Manager, Emerging Markets Equity
Alison Shimada is a portfolio manager for the Emerging Markets Equity team at
Wells Capital Management. She joined WellsCap in 2003 after serving as an investment officer of the University of California Regents-Office of the Treasurer. Prior
to her current role, she served as a senior analyst covering areas of developing
Europe and Africa for three years with the firm. She began her responsibilities at
WellsCap as the head of equity research for the developed markets (EAFE) international equity team and as a senior investment analyst for Japan and Australia/
New Zealand. She began her investment industry career in 1985, and her prior
experience also includes serving as a portfolio manager specializing in Malaysian
equities at Commerce Asset Fund Managers and as a senior equity analyst covering
Japanese securities at Fidelity Investments Japan. Alison earned a bachelor’s degree
in political economies of industrial societies from the University of California at
Berkeley. She earned a master’s degree in business administration from Harvard
Business School.
This paper significantly benefited from extensive research and development by Matt Alexander,
CFA, product manager at Wells Capital Management.The author thanks him for his helpful
comments and suggestions.
The High, Medium, and Low yield portfolios represent the top 30%, middle 40%, and bottom 30% of dividend paying stocks formed on Dividends/Price at
the end of each June using NYSE breakpoints. The dividend yield used to form portfolios in June of year t is the total dividends paid from July of t-1 to June
of t per dollar of equity in June of t. The Non-Dividend Payers portfolio represents stocks with no reported dividend payment from July of t-1 to June of t.
Portfolios are formed from all NYSE, AMEX, and NASDAQ stocks for which data are available. Data are courtesy of Kenneth French Data Library and the
Center for Research in Security Prices (CRSP).
2
Market and Risk-Free Rate are derived from the Fama/French Factor Portfolios.
3
Morgan Stanley Research. U.S.: 6/1973 to 8/2014. Europe: 1/2001 to 7/2013. Japan: 1/2001 to 7/2013. Emerging Markets: 1/2001 to 7/2013.
4
Fama, Eugene F., and Kenneth R. French. 1992. “The Cross-Section of Expected Stock Returns.” Journal of Finance, vol. 47, no. 2 (June):427–465.
5
Lakonishok, Josef, Andrei Shleifer, and Robert W. Vishny.1994. “Contrarian Investment, Extrapolation, and Risk.” Journal of Finance, vol. 49, no. 5
(December):1541–78.
6
Morgan Stanley Research, 6/25/12
7
UBS Investment Research, 2/13
8
Fundfire, “Inst’l Emerging Debt Flows Risk Overheating,” 4/1/13
9
Citi Research, 2/6/13
10
UBS Investment Research, 2/13/13
11
CLSA Asia-Pacific Markets, 3/1/13
12
Through 12/31/12
13
Wall Street Journal, “China’s Changing Workforce,” 5/1/13
14
Financial Times, “Cambodia Benefits From Rising China Wages,” 1/7/13
15
UBS Investment Research 2/13/13
16
Morgan Stanley Research 6/25/12
17
UBS Investment Research, 1/24/13
1
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investment management services for a variety of institutions. The views expressed are those of the author at the time of writing and are subject to change.
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