Despite some periods of high volatility and uncertainty, many
emerging market ETFs have been strong performers in 2012. Some of
the top country ETFs, including those that target nations like
China, India and Mexico, have all added double digits on the year,
easily outpacing the S&P 500 and broad emerging market
benchmarks as well.
Yet there is one big exception from this list, the South
American giant of Brazil. Its most popular ETF, the iShares
MSCI Brazil Index Fund (EWZ), has had a rough go in 2012,
losing over 5% at time of writing, while the product is also down a
similar level when looking at three and five year metrics (read Do
Country ETFs Really Provide Diversification?).
This is pretty surprising as it suggests that Brazil, a nation
that many believe could become a global economic force in the
21st century, has lagged significantly its competitors
in the YTD time frame. Given that commodity prices were relatively
strong in the middle part of the year, one has to wonder if EWZ can
come back, or if flat returns should be the new normal for this
product.
After all, recent reports suggest that Brazilian growth rates
will be the lowest among the major BRICS nations for 2012 with an
increase that is roughly half the next closest member, South
Africa. Meanwhile interest rate cuts have had little impact on
spurring growth, despite the fact that the benchmark Selic rate has
dropped 525 basis points in 10 straight Central Bank slashes.
This is somewhat troubling as further cuts may be necessary, but
these will likely increase inflationary concerns, while the
Brazilian currency hasn’t exactly been strong either. This movement
lower by the real has acted as a double whammy on foreign
investors, further hampering dollar-denominated returns in 2012,
and casting a big shadow over 2013 growth prospects (read Brazil
ETFs: More Trouble on the Horizon?).
Clearly, this trend has left EWZ at the bottom of the emerging
market pile as few investors are bullish on the country for the
time being. However, despite the pessimism, there are actually some
corners of the Brazilian ETF world that are holding up surprisingly
well and could be better investment targets at this time.
These potentially better investment plays come to us in the form
of mid-cap and small cap Brazilian ETFs, as well as the consumer
targeted fund. These products have been performing far better than
EWZ this year, and if anything, have been outperforming major
emerging market ETFs so far in 2012 as well.
At least part of this outperformance has to be due to the far
more spread out nature—and the sector choices-- of these ETFs when
compared to EWZ. The iShares large cap focused fund has over 15% of
its assets in Petrobras and another 10% in Vale, suggesting a
pretty heavy concentration in these two struggling giants.
The same situation isn’t happening in the small cap and mid cap
focused funds targeting Brazil, as these ETFs like BRAZ for mid cap
exposure, BRF and EWZS for small cap holdings, and
BRAQ as a consumer play, have all done much better on a
year-to-date basis. In fact, not only do these do a better job of
diversifying away company specific risk, but they all have a much
bigger allocation to consumer segments and industrials than their
massive EWZ counterpart (see Forget Petrobras with These Brazil
ETFs).
This has led to huge outperformance for the group of BRAZ, BRF,
EWZS, and BRAQ as all four have beaten out EWZ by at least 1,000
basis points so far this year. Furthermore, the two small cap
products have both added more than 12% this year, while the
consumer fund has gained more than 28%, suggesting that this corner
has been the real place to be in Brazil in 2012.
So while some investors may be beginning to panic over Brazil,
it probably isn’t warranted. Yes, the country does have some
significant issues plaguing its economy, but there are still some
solid sectors that are humming along, even if they aren’t being
represented heavily in EWZ.
These segments include the consumer and the broad small cap
space as these firms are closer to the growing consumer growth
story in Brazil and thus are seeing more of the benefits than what
firms like Vale and Petrobras are experiencing. Due to this, it
could be time for investors who are deep into EWZ to consider
making a different play on the Brazilian economy (see Access the
$30 trillion Consumer Market with These ETFs).
The consumer and smaller securities have clearly developed a
leadership role for Brazil at this time, even during this low
growth environment for the nation. They have proven to be something
of a safe haven and thus may be a better pick for investors who
want to tap into the real Brazilian growth story, instead of
targeting the nation with the multi-national firms that are clearly
struggling and falling behind their pint sized and consumer focused
peers.
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GLBL-X BRZL CON (BRAQ): ETF Research Reports
MKT VEC-BRZL SC (BRF): ETF Research Reports
ISHARS-BRAZIL (EWZ): ETF Research Reports
ISHARS-MS BR SC (EWZS): ETF Research Reports
PETROBRAS-ADR C (PBR): Free Stock Analysis Report
VALE SA (VALE): Free Stock Analysis Report
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