The best way to play Asia's coming financial services boom

By Cris Sholto Heaton Mar 08, 2010

Cris Sholto Heaton

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Financial news tends to be relentlessly short-term. What stocks went up yesterday? Whose results beat expectations and who missed? But if you're saving for the long term, this is just noise. The biggest impact on our investments comes from trends over years and decades.

And this week's theme is very long-term indeed. It's something we almost never think about because it changes so slowly. Yet it may be responsible for a lot of the market's ups and downs.

I'll say in advance that this is one of those subjects where it's hard to draw definite conclusions. But as best as I can tell, the outcome is pretty positive for Asia - and not at all encouraging for the developed world...

The volatility of valuations

In the long run, returns on shares consist of two things: the dividends you receive, and the change in the price of shares. In turn, the price change breaks down into the change in earnings and the change in the valuation that investors are willing to put on the earnings (the price/earnings ratio).

I'm going to focus solely on the p/e ratio. As you know, this is very volatile. The chart below shows this rather well for the S&P 500. (As usual, I'm using US data here, because it's the best long-term series that we have.)

Price/earnings ratio for S&P 500

Even when you adjust for swings in earnings caused by booms and recessions, it's still pretty volatile. The chart below shows the cyclically adjusted p/e (CAPE), popularised by Robert Shiller. This divides the market price by the average of the last ten years' inflation-adjusted earnings. You can see a very clear pattern of the p/e expanding and contracting.

Cyclically adjusted price/earnings ratio for S&P 500 (via Capital Economics)

Why is this? One explanation is swings in investor optimism. At times such as the 1970s, with inflation high and labour unrest rising, investors are very uncertain about the future. So they put a low valuation on companies to reflect the fact that they don't know if conditions will improve.

At other times, they become irrationally optimistic and convinced that the boom they're enjoying will go on forever. This can turn into a mania. The dotcom era with technological breakthroughs, steadily falling inflation and benign global politics is a very good example.

Because investors' views only change slowly, it takes a long time for the CAPE to revert back to normal from extreme values. After the seventies, it took time for investors to become more optimistic. After the dotcom bust, investors were slow to recognise how excessive valuations had become and let them return to normal. Indeed, according the CAPE, they still haven't – the S&P 500 is still apparently around 40% overvalued, and only briefly dipped back to being cheap during the worst of the global panic.

From spenders to savers to spenders again

That's one possible explanation. But another way to think about it is via demographics.

People's saving habits change depending on their age. Young people usually save little. Those in early middle age are much more likely to be paying into a pension. After retirement, most will be drawing down their savings to live on.

Shifts in the ratio of savers to non-savers should affect the demand for shares. And if the supply of shares doesn't grow in line, basic economics tell us what should happen. The price of shares will go up more than they otherwise would. In short, we should see p/es expand.

Does this happen in practice? Tim Bond of Barclays has a good essay on the topic in the latest issue of his firm's annual Equity Gilt Study. He produces quite a convincing argument that it does. The chart on the right below shows the relationship between the CAPE for the S&P 500 since 1950, and a modelled CAPE derived from US demographics. As you can see, there is a very good correlation between the two. (The one on the left shows the US long-term government bond. As you can see, demographics appear to explain this as well, but today I'll just focus on equities.)

S&P 500 CAPE versus modelled CAPE based on US demographics (via Barclays Capital)

In fact, the correlation is so good it's almost odd. Would you really expect demographics to fully explain the change in the CAPE over time? Take the seventies, when p/es shrunk sharply. The normal explanation is that this is due to high inflation, volatile economies and investor uncertainty. Surely it makes more sense to have some variation driven by this, rather than simple demographics?

Well no. Bond argues that the two are effectively connected. It was the demographics of the seventies, with smaller labour force growth, that created this environment. Conversely the good times before and after reflected much better labour demographics.

That makes some sense. I'd be reluctant to conclude just from this one correlation covering a few decades that demographics explain all the movements in the CAPE. But it's almost certainly an important factor. Which leads us on to my main question: what do demographics say about the outlook for Asian markets?


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Asia's growing pool of savers

I did some very simple number crunching on the same lines as Bond's study. I compared the ratio of people aged 40-49, to people aged 20-29 for a number of countries. I took data from 1991 (the earliest consistently available) up to 2050 (using projected population data). This ratio is known as the m/y ratio, for middle-aged/young. The results are grouped on the chart below.

Population ratios for Asia and selected other markets

The results are apparently quite positive for most of Asia. Countries such as the UK and US face several years of declining m/y ratios. That may mean further declines in market valuations.

Some Asian markets also face headwinds. Hong Kong's ratio is set to fall over the next decade, while Malaysia and Singapore will be flat to slightly down. Korea and Japan are on course to peak and decline in the same period.

But China, India, Indonesia and Vietnam all have rising m/y ratios. That suggests their markets should be buoyed by demand from rising numbers of savers in years to come.

Obviously this conclusion comes with a long list of caveats. First, we're not considering whether the market is currently fairly valued or not. If a country is already on a much higher p/e than is justified, then it could still see valuations contract, despite favourable demographics. In my view, most of Asia is fairly valued, although the mainland Chinese market is probably on the expensive side. But without a long market history it's hard to be absolutely certain. Others may disagree.

Second, this looks solely at domestic factors. It doesn't take account of foreign investors, who can play a big part in many Asian markets. Numbers aren't always easy to get hold of or consistent, but the influence varies a lot. Mainland China is probably a few percent. India is probably about 10%-15%. Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and Singapore are probably all in the 20%-30% range.

So falling overseas investments from foreign countries with falling m/y ratios could perhaps offset growing investment from domestic savers. But I think the process is more likely to go the other way. Developed world savers are likely to allocate more funds to Asia in years to come.

Third, this essentially assumes that demand for shares from new savers outstrips supply. Is this valid? In emerging economies with underdeveloped capital markets, there might be a large number of firms that will float on the market as the economy develops, thereby increasing the supply.

Fourth, the saving population in an emerging market is very different to that in late-20th century America. The vast majority of Chinese and Indian citizens are not involved in the stock market or any form of investment. They save, if at all, in cash. Others who invest will do so in other forms such as property or precious metals.

This could be a negative. The demographics of the investing population may look nothing like the demographics of the overall country. After all, better-off people tend to have fewer children. Or it could be a positive. It may lead to a stream of future investors moving into the market as their wages rises, they join the middle class and their investing habits (and the local capital markets) become more sophisticated.

Fifth, the big problem with concluding anything based on America's experience, is that you're talking about the most successful economy of the 20th century. Experiences elsewhere can be very different and quite often worse for investors. In extreme cases, they've been wiped out by hyperinflation, civil war and revolutions. We can't rely on comparisons too much.

Asian valuations are already expanding

Still, there's reason to believe that demographics will help most Asian markets. In the past, I've argued that developed world markets – especially the S&P 500 – will see a valuation contraction in the next decade, while Asian ones see expansion.

If you compare the trend in the S&P 500 CAPE with the price/book (p/b) value for the MSCI Asia ex-Japan (AxJ), you can already see this process in action. The S&P 500 peaked in 2000 and is still shrinking, while the AxJ bottomed in the Asia crisis in 1997 and is still expanding. I'm using p/b for the AxJ because we don't have a long-term CAPE series for it – p/b is the best available through-cycle measure.

Cyclically adjusted price/earnings ratio for S&P 500 (via Capital Economics)

Price/book ratio for the MSCI Asia ex Japan (via Citigroup)

I viewed that as driven mostly by sentiment, as Asian economies outperform most of the developed world. And it's highly likely that foreign inflows and outflows will play a part, given that most of these markets are still small compared to the developed world investor pool. But it looks like local demographics will also be a helpful tailwind.

Good news for financial services

Apart from this being generally bullish for Asian markets, there's one obvious likely beneficiary – the financial services industry. As the amount of savings put into the market grows, it will mean more business for brokers, fund management groups and other financial intermediaries.

It's notable that shares in investment managers such as Dreyfus, Franklin and Federated were very strong performers in the US during the eighties and nineties. It was over this period that the modern mutual fund industry expanded, as it successfully convinced people they were better putting their money in funds rather than investing directly in stocks.

Franklin Resources share price

This could be a very promising long-term investment theme in Asia. My forthcoming second stock tip for the beta-test of my new Asia Investor email is loosely tied to this, as it provides support services for the financial industry. But I'm looking at more direct plays for future picks.

For those of you who prefer to invest through funds, there's only one dedicated Asian financials fund that I know of: the newly launched iShares MSCI Far East Financials Sector ETF (US: FEFN). But on a quick inspection, it doesn't seem suitable for a way to play this theme, being heavily weighted in Japanese megabanks and Hong Kong real estate.

I would regard a Singapore ETF as a more useful investment, given how important financial services and wealth management are likely to be to the future of its economy (see last week's article for more on this: Singapore - a cheap play on Asian growth). But clearly this isn't a pure play and it will be helpful when we have more focused sector ETFs for Asia.

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Comments (6)

Comments

  • 1. Paul

    (08 March 2010, 06:50PM)  Complain about this comment

    There seems to be a lot of excitement about the "near perfect correlation" between CAPE and demographics. On 13 Feb. 2010 the FT displayed the "raw data" graphic ( How baby boomers lead bear markets by the nose). The demographic data (ratio of 35-54 year olds to general population) are of course highly serially correlated. Therefore there are in reality only three informative data points: 1960: high; 1980: low; 2000: twice as high. And you see the same pattern with CAPE. Only the dismal scientists (economists) can support a whole new theory with three data points. There are millions of variables which in this time frame display the same "slanted S"-shaped pattern. This "perfect correlation" based on three data points is hardly enough to generate a hypothesis (to be tested with data from other countries and other past and future data). But to go overboard and to claim that we now can predict PE's, bond yields, and everything else important is just unbelievable. .

  • 2. Cris Sholto Heaton

    (08 March 2010, 08:20PM)  Complain about this comment

    Thanks Paul. As I mentioned in the piece, I think the closeness of the fit is surprising and seems too good to be true. I'd certainly expect there to be other factors involved. However, it seems very likely that demographics and the shifts between savers and spenders explain some of the variation in p/es - to be otherwise would require that the pool of assets available for investment expands and contracts more or less in line with those demographic shifts.

    Regarding serial correlation, yes, that's a given for demographic data. But one of the interesting aspects of CAPE is that it apparently does the same. Why does it do that if it's driven purely by sentiment and expectations, which would not obviously be expected to exhibit serial correlation. A relationship with demographics or another slow-evolving variable would help to explain that.

    I don’t recommend accepting the theory uncritically, but demographics probably will be a useful tailwind for Asian markets.

  • 3. Peter J Taylor

    (08 March 2010, 10:13PM)  Complain about this comment

    We ignore demographics at our peril, and this article adds a welcome dimension. I am curious as to why the 40-49 and 20-29 age groups were chosen. If you seek a ratio of age groups of net spenders to net savers, the spenders need to include retired people, whilst the biggest savers are probably those rapidly approaching retirement. The 20-29 year-olds were traditionally mostly neutral, because they could only spend what they earned. But in the last 30 years or so they have been able, even encouraged, to become indebted. Comparison with previous generations is not valid. Finally, distinctions between nations are not all they seem, because most economies are no longer closed, and most investors can move their capital worldwide.

  • 4. Francis Groves

    (09 March 2010, 10:19AM)  Complain about this comment

    As always, thanks for your article. My query is that I'm not sure that you can really expect active fund managers to benefit so much from the prospective investment boom in Asia. Might not the Asian investors prefer to self-invest through ETFs, too.

    In fact, following the Pru/AIA deal it would be interesting to know how much nationals in Far eastern countries value intermediary-provided services, too. I'm thinking they may just decide that, hey, there's way to much fat on these processes, let's cut it (them) out and go down the DIY route instead.

  • 5. Paul

    (09 March 2010, 12:32PM)  Complain about this comment

    To answer Peter Taylor's question: What I consistently see economists doing is to generate a model and then "back-test" it on the same data, which is meaningless. In generating the model they throw in every age grouping and pick the one that "predicts" best. My guess is that the age groups came about this way. You have to test your model on completely different data sets. So if this model holds not only from 1950 to 2000 but also, say, from 1850 - 1900, not only for the S&P but also for the Nikkei, Bovespa, Kospi, etc., this would lend some credibility. (Their PE's are correlated with the S&P, but their demographics are less so). Of course demographics are extremely important, but it's highly unlikely that one variable predicts what moves the world. Life is never that simple.

  • 6. Cris Sholto Heaton

    (09 March 2010, 05:23PM)  Complain about this comment

    Peter, the M/Y ratio is used to focus on the relative size of the middle-aged ‘bulge’ in the demographics that are the savers. You could use the 40-49 group as a percentage of total population or another measure and get the same trends. I used M/Y to make my numbers comparable to others that I had from a different source.

    Francis, yes, ETFs are popular in many Asian markets. They’ll probably continue to take market share from active funds everywhere. But running ETFs is a profitable business – if traditional active managers feel threatened, expect them to begin launching their own. Re intermediaries, in my experience Asian consumers get fleeced as badly as those anywhere else, or worse!

    Paul, I completely agree that if you want to view this as a model for predicting p/es you need a lot more data. The only thing that I would want to take away from it is that demographics might be a factor in returns, which seems plausible.

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