Dona Ferentes
Abrió la caja, vio al gatito, y sonrió
- Joined
- 11 January 2016
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within Asia, such a broad range of economies, often Japan is set aside as it is seen as developed. There are a range of metrics to make investment decisions on: whether earnings P/E are the only or relevant ones may not be that relevant if the region is seen as growth focused.
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In India, returns have exceeded those of most global indices in the past few years. Its current P/E is high and around 22X, moderately above the historic average.
But the MSCI Emerging market index, of which India is a constituent, is trading at 11 times.
The case for Indian equities is built off its favourable demographic circumstances, significant domestic investment and consumption growth and having a wide range of companies.
A Valuation approach would suggest a switch from India to others in emerging markets.
Japan has been another outperformer recently. For many years, its valuation was at the bottom end of developed markets, yet attracted few enthusiastic investors. The corporate sector is not seen to optimise return on capital, and has been sitting on unproductive investments and cash.
Now the Japan stock exchange will publish a list of companies that fail to illustrate how they will improve governance and returns. Perhaps there is the prospect of substantially better earnings in coming years.
.
In India, returns have exceeded those of most global indices in the past few years. Its current P/E is high and around 22X, moderately above the historic average.
But the MSCI Emerging market index, of which India is a constituent, is trading at 11 times.
The case for Indian equities is built off its favourable demographic circumstances, significant domestic investment and consumption growth and having a wide range of companies.
A Valuation approach would suggest a switch from India to others in emerging markets.
Japan has been another outperformer recently. For many years, its valuation was at the bottom end of developed markets, yet attracted few enthusiastic investors. The corporate sector is not seen to optimise return on capital, and has been sitting on unproductive investments and cash.
Now the Japan stock exchange will publish a list of companies that fail to illustrate how they will improve governance and returns. Perhaps there is the prospect of substantially better earnings in coming years.