by BCA Research: 11:40:00, May 23, 2007 |
The conditions which have historically ended emerging equity bull markets are an inflation outbreak or debt deflation. Our Emerging Market Strategy service argues that neither are currently present. With regards to inflation, core CPI is either low or falling in the vast majority of emerging economies, despite five strong years of global growth. Rampant productivity gains in the global economic system have resulted in both healthy profit margins and disinflationary pressures. Specifically, falling unit labor costs continue to offset the impact of rising raw material costs and reduce the pressure on the corporate sector to aggressively hike selling prices. China presents a good example. The country is the epicenter of global growth and consequently, it is natural to expect that inflation will first begin creeping up there. Moreover, monetary conditions in China are extremely stimulative, with a cheap currency and borrowing costs substantially below nominal GDP growth. However, inflation is not a problem in China: Core CPI running as low as 1%. |
Thursday, May 24, 2007
What Could End The Emerging Markets Bull Run
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