The month saw the origin of Bric, market crashes of 1929 and 1987.
October may be best known to investors for the stock-market crashes of 1929 and 1987. Yet another event took place four years ago that investors may be more inclined to celebrate.
October 1 was the anniversary of the publication date of ‘Dreaming With Brics: The Path to 2050’, a report by Goldman Sachs Group Inc economists that popularised the acronym for Brazil, Russia, India and China.
The four developing countries as a group may account for more of the world’s economy than France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the UK and the US combined “in less than 40 years”, or by 2033, the study concluded.
The Bric stock markets have been on a tear since then. Brazil has set the pace, as the Bovespa index rose six-fold in dollar terms and closed above 60,000 last week for the first time. Benchmarks of Russian, Indian and Chinese shares have tripled and then some.
China, the worst performer in local currency terms before this year, moved to first as prices surged on the mainland and also in Hong Kong.
The Shanghai Composite Index has quadrupled since the Goldman report was published. The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index, tracking the shares of Chinese companies listed in Hong Kong, has quintupled.
All four of the Brics have beaten the Morgan Stanley Capital International Emerging Markets Index, which more than tripled during the period and rose to a record yesterday. The MSCI World Index of developed markets gained 81 per cent.
Currency Benefit:
What’s more, investments in Bric equity funds have “recovered some traction after slipping badly earlier this year”, EPFR Global said in a statement last week. The funds took in $828 million in the past five weeks, enabling them to recoup most of a $1.2 billion outflow through mid-August, according to the Boston-based firm’s data.
Brazil has been the most lucrative of the four markets for global investors because its currency, the real, has gained the most against the dollar since Goldman published its report.
The real’s appreciation accounts for almost half of the Bovespa’s gain in dollar terms.
The rest comes from Brazilian stocks such as Cia. Vale do Rio Doce, the world’s largest iron-ore producer, whose shares have soared nine-fold.