OFW Filipino Heroes

Thursday, September 27, 2012

USA, EUROPE race grabbing the GOLDEN PEARL OF THE ORIENT - the unbelievable rising Philippines

iShares MSCI Philippines 

Investable Market Index Fund 
(NYSE: EPHE)

Investing in Philippines: Escape the U.S. with a Low-Debt, Low-Inflation Economy

 

Along with its various countries and economies, the Asian investment thesis has certainly evolved over the years.

 

Those born in the 1960s and 1970s surely remember the 1980s when Japan's economy rose to global prominence, showing the world that at least at that time, Japan truly was the land of the rising sun.

 

The Asian financial crisis struck in the late 1990s, but that even only temporarily chased Western investors away from the continent. Caution would give way to ebullience earlier this century as investors became enamored by the Chinese and Indian growth stories.

 

Flush with statistics about that pair representing two of the fastest growing economies in the world and that one or both would one day pass the U.S. in terms of economic heft; investors were once again seduced by Asian opportunities.

 

Renewed appetite for Asian exposure coincided with another boom, which of the exchange-traded fund (ETF) industry. As the Chinese and Indian economies became juggernauts, ETF sponsors have met investor demand for exposure to these countries coming up with everything from ETFs focused on Chinese technology companies to Indian small-caps.

 

ETF issuers did not stop there. As investors clamored for ways to access other Asian markets, ETF sponsors obliged.

 

In other words, the Chinese and Indian growth stories gave way to the burgeoning economies of Indonesia, Thailand and others. Since the March 2009 market bottom, the iShares MSCI Thailand Investable Market Index Fund (NYSE: THD) and the Market Vectors Indonesia ETF (NYSE: IDX) have been two of the best performing ETFs of any kind.

 

Those funds are still performing well, but a case can be made there is a new sheriff on the Asian investment block.

 

Investing in the GOLDEN PEARL OF THE ORIENT of the unbelievable rising Philippines   

 

The Philippines, a Southeast Asian nation comprised of thousands of islands, is not completely unknown to Western investors, but the economy there is smaller comparable nations such as Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand.

 

A fair assessment might be to say the country is just starting to shed its under-the-radar status.

 

That much is proven by the iShares MSCI Philippines Investable Market Index Fund (NYSE: EPHE), almost certainly the best way for U.S. investors to tap into the Philippine investment thesis without incurring unnecessary single stock risk.

 

Actually, there are not many Philippine American depositary receipts available, so EPHE is the best way to access the Philippines. Period.

 

EPHE debuted two years ago and now has over $101 million in assets under management, a sum that indicates investors have at least been intrigued by what the Philippines has to offer.

 

Those investors have not been disappointed.

 

EPHE is up 28.5% year-to-date, making it one of the best funds tracking any individual country in any region of the world.

 

EPHE: More to the Story

 

EPHE's performance does not paint the entire picture about the Philippine economy.

 

Arguably, when the various statistics are weighed together, one might wonder why the ETF has not performed even better and why allegedly smart economists and institutional investors are not embracing the Philippines to a larger extent.

 

Inflation is benign in the Philippines. That is something India cannot say.

 

Even Thailand has struggled with rising prices at various points in recent years. The Philippines could notch GDP growth of 6% this year and the country is well on its way to meeting or exceeding that number after posting growth of 6.1% in the first half of the year 2012.

 

Then there is a fact about the Philippines that would make many Americans and Europeans gasp in disbelief: The country could be debt-free in a few years.

 

Currently sitting on a debt-to-GDP ratio of 50%, one the U.S., Japan and the Eurozone would die for, government spending is less than 19% of GDP.

 

As of August 2012; Buoyed by $81 billion in international reserves, the Philippines' external balance sheet is nothing short of impressive. Standard & Poor's, the ratings agency that is notoriously slow on the uptake, still has a junk credit rating on the Philippines, though it is BB+, the highest non-investment grade rating. S&P upgraded the Philippines in July and the country's BB+ rating is its highest since 2003.

 

Adding to the bull case for the Philippines is a favorable slate of country rankings. Data from the Heritage Foundation indicate that when metrics such as economic freedom, freedom from corruption, land freedom and related metrics are combined, the Philippines scores better than other Southeast Asian economies such as Indonesia and Vietnam. The Philippines also tops Greece, China, India and Russia.

 

Note to investors: One or two nice statistics here or there do not mean any country's investment thesis is perfect, the Philippines included, so don't throw all your money into EPHE.

 

The country has strides to make on the corruption front, corporate legal reform is essential and the country's rate of poverty is high, even for a developing nation. Those factors should not be ignored, but the totality of the Philippines economic story indicates its (EPHE's) best chapters have yet to be written.

 

Money Morning (USA)

Single VISA Philippines with ASEAN will soon to be implemented

To entice more tourists to visit the Philippines, the Department of Tourism is supporting the move for a unified visa for foreigners traveling to countries that are part of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).

 

"The Philippines is one of the countries working hard for a unified ASEAN visa," Tourism Secretary Ramon Jimenez Jr. said at the opening of the Pacific Asia Travel Association (PATA) Travel Mart in Manila on September 27.

 

He said that talks are already underway among member countries on how to implement a unified ASEAN visa similar to Europe's Schengen visa, which made traveling between the 25 member countries (22 European Union countries and 3 non-EU members) easier and less bureaucratic.

 

Jimenez said 5 countries are ready to implement the visa, listing: Malaysia, Brunei, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. But he said it would take the participation of a majority of the 10 nation group to get the scheme off the ground.

 

Easier to visit Philippines

 

Jimenez said the unified visa will make it easier for tourists traveling to the region to stop by the Philippines.

 

Jimenez maintains that the country has a smaller international visitor arrival figure relative to other ASEAN countries because the Philippines doesn't enjoy "a connection of contiguous land mass" that allows foreign visitors to drive across a border and be counted among international arrivals.

 

He stressed that the Philippines is working hard to bring in more foreign tourists, to streamline travel requirements, and to modernize the visa application processing.

 

He explained that the country is trying to position itself as a must-experience destination in Asia.

 

Under the National Tourism Development Plan (NTDP), the country is trying to hit 10 million international visitor arrivals, employ 6.8 million workers in tourism and generate P1.9 trillion in tourism receipts by 2016.

 

The Philippines lags behind its regional neighbors in tourist arrivals. Data published on June 30 by ASEAN, put visitor arrivals for 2011 at:

 

  1. Malaysia 24,714,300
  2. Thailand 19,098,300
  3. Singapore 13,171,300
  4. Indonesia 7,649,700
  5. Vietnam 6,014,000
  6. Philippines 3,917,500
  7. Cambodia 2,881,900
  8. Lao PDR 2,723,600
  9. Myanmar 816,400
  10. Brunei Darussalam 242,100

 

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