Short Briefings on Long Term Thinking - Baillie Gifford
Why emerging markets have changed
Emerging markets have sometimes promised more than they have delivered, but circumstances may be tipping in growth investors’ favour. Will Sutcliffe, head of our Emerging Markets Team, explains why it’s an opportune time to invest in the asset class.
Background:
Will Sutcliffe is the head of Baillie Gifford’s Emerging Markets Team and co-manager of our Emerging Markets Leading Companies Fund. In this episode of Short Briefings on Long Term Thinking, he brings his 23 years of experience in the field to explain what makes the specialism different from other types of growth investing.
He makes the case that finding exceptional growth companies at attractive valuations is only part of the equation. Investors must be mindful of the broader macroeconomic environment, he explains, to avoid getting caught out by currency swings or spiralling debt costs. This leads him to conclude that recent resilience in emerging market economies could point to a favourable outlook for the asset class’s growth stocks.
All this only matters to our portfolios if there are exceptional businesses to invest in, and Sutcliffe argues that the emerging markets are home to an increasing number of world-class companies. They range from the Taiwanese chip maker TSMC to the energy, retail and telecoms conglomerate Reliance Industries.
Resources:
South-east Asia’s rising export stars
Gabriel Garcia Marquez: Until August
Timecodes:
00:00 Introduction
01:45 Joining the Emerging Markets Team
03:15 A ‘terrifying’ baptism of fire
05:00 Emerging markets’ ‘dirty little secret’
05:45 Qualifying for emerging markets status
06:45 Higher-calibre companies
08:00 Macroeconomic resilience
09:30 US-China tensions and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine
12:00 Investing in China
13:45 PDD Holding’s Pinduoduo and Temu