Y se concentra en los mercados emergentes…  Es el refugio a largo plazo para las inversiones, dado lo flojo que anda la UE  y sus problemas internos y el riesgo de contagio…
World GDP
Global GDP growth was  sluggish in the first three months of 2015, remaining at 2.7% year on year for  a second consecutive quarter. Growth in the world economy has become increasingly  reliant on just three countries: China, the United States and India were  responsible for nearly 80% of global growth in the first three months of the  year. The euro area’s slow recovery has continued; the 19-country bloc  experienced 1.1% year-on-year growth in the first quarter of 2015 compared with  0.9% in the previous quarter. Leaving aside China and India, emerging markets  struggled in the first quarter. They contributed less than 13% of global  growth, the smallest proportion since late 2009.
Abrazos,
PD1: Cuánta razón tiene este  gacho:
Los inversores deberían confiar en los mercados emergentes
¿Suben los tipos de interés  en EEUU? Salgan de los mercados emergentes. ¿La eurozona no llega a un acuerdo  con Grecia? Salgan de los mercados emergentes. ¿Problemas en algún país  emergente?
Salgan  inmediatamente de los mercados emergentes. Hay una creencia muy extendida según  la cual, los mercados emergentes tienen un importante nivel de riesgo y  volatilidad y, por tanto, están en primera línea cuando aumenta la aversión al  riesgo. Así ha vuelto a ocurrir con las dudas sobre los aumentos de tipos de  interés en EEUU y el estancamiento de las negociaciones con Grecia. La  exposición de los inversores a los mercados emergentes se mantuvo en el mínimo  de los últimos quince meses en junio, según un estudio de la gestora de fondos  global de Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
Esa  filosofía parece cada vez más desfasada. Desde la crisis financiera global, ha  quedado demostrado que los riesgos en las economías avanzadas se habían  subestimado.
Los  inversores en estas economías tuvieron que aprender a familiarizarse con  conceptos como el riesgo crediticio, algo bastante habitual entre sus homólogos  de los mercados emergentes. El último ejemplo es el descenso de la liquidez y  el aumento de la volatilidad de los mercados avanzados, características que  normalmente se asociaban a los mercados emergentes. Además, en el caso de las  economías emergentes, el vaso siempre suele verse medio vacío. No hay más que  recordar la ralentización de su crecimiento, que, en muchos casos, fue debido a  las reformas destinadas a obtener un crecimiento más sostenible. En cualquier  caso, los países emergentes siguen creciendo a un ritmo más rápido que las  economías desarrolladas. Según el FMI, está previsto que este año representen  el 70% del crecimiento global. Un mayor problema reside en el escaso  crecimiento de los países desarrollados, después de los estímulos introducidos  desde que estalló la crisis. Por otra parte, en los últimos años se han  anunciado ya varias crisis inminentes de las economías en desarrollo que nunca  llegaron a materializarse. El secreto reside en sus regímenes cambiarios, más  flexibles y en su elevado nivel de reservas. Un ejemplo de esto lo representa  Rusia, que ha logrado soportar una pérdida total de acceso a los mercados  financieros globales, algo que en el pasado habría tenido un mayor impacto.
En  realidad, ahora que el poder de la política monetaria extraordinaria se está  reduciendo, es probable que comience a mirarse con otros ojos a los mercados  emergentes, rechazados durante tanto tiempo. Las valoraciones de los mercados  avanzados tanto de los bonos como de las acciones son generosas; las  rentabilidades parecen haber caído. Las acciones y bonos de las economías  emergentes parecen mucho más atractivas en términos de rentabilidad futura,  teniendo en cuenta su punto de partida. Los expertos de Pictet Asset Management  pronostican unos retornos anualizados de dos dígitos de las acciones en el  transcurso de esta década. Los mercados emergentes son arriesgados - pero al  menos los inversores obtienen una recompensa por ese riesgo.
Es  probable que un aumento de los tipos de interés de EEUU ponga a prueba a todos  los mercados, después de tantos años de políticas relajadas. Y la venta  instintiva de valores y bonos emergentes al primer indicio de problemas puede  seguir estando vinculada al comportamiento del mercado. No obstante, es momento  de que los inversores se cuestionen su validez.
PD2: No hacen más que construir  infraestructuras…
Building for the Future: Infrastructure in Emerging Markets
There has been a recent debate about whether the end of the  commodities “supercycle” is over, and if we are entering a new era of lower  prices for natural resources, particularly oil. While no one can predict  exactly where prices are headed next, one thing I do know is that demand for  natural resources has continued to increase in emerging markets. Emerging  economies in general have experienced stronger economic growth trends than  developed markets over the past decade, a trend that I expect to continue. That  growth, combined with rising populations and a trend toward urbanization,  requires more infrastructure.
Of the 10 most populous countries in the world, eight are in  emerging markets, and the emerging markets of China and India represent the largest  countries in the world by population, each totaling more than one billion  people.1 These people need food, clean water, energy, roads and housing.  China is undergoing a trend toward urbanization, which we believe still has a  ways to go and will drive the need for growth in these areas.
While the media has drawn attention to so-called “ghost cities” in  China, claiming there has been overbuilding, visitors to China can easily see  there remains a need for housing for all these new urban dwellers—and  transportation to get them from place to place. The railway network in China is  far more limited than that of major developed countries, even much smaller  ones. China still needs to invest more in infrastructure; in our view, the game  is not over. More roads are needed to accommodate the dramatically increased  number of cars and trucks, while more train connections are needed to meet the  rising travel demands of China’s billion people.
There certainly is a price cycle in various commodities, but I  believe the demand for commodities globally should continue to increase. The  price of oil is, of course, particularly volatile, but that price volatility  doesn’t correlate to the movement in demand. When the price of a barrel of oil  plummeted more than 25% in 2014, demand didn’t decrease by the same amount.  Demand continues to increase. The US Energy Information Administration  estimates that in 2014, global daily consumption of petroleum and other liquids  grew by 0.9 million barrels/day to average 92.0 million barrels/day, and  expects global consumption to grow by 1.3 million barrels/day in 2015 and 2016.2
Oil is not the only product in demand. In China, there has been an  explosive growth in automobiles. With more gasoline-powered vehicles comes  increased pollution—most of us know about the famous smog in Beijing. Catalytic  converters, which contain palladium, help alleviate this pollution problem, so  we expect demand for palladium should continue to rise. Incidentally, palladium  is one commodity that did not suffer a decline in price in 2014 while many  other commodity prices fell.
The 3rd Plenum  of China’s Communist Party in 2013 announced various reforms related to  infrastructure development, including private sector deregulation, resources  pricing reform, and improvements in efficiency and resources allocation in  state-owned enterprises. China has seen progress made in a number of key areas,  as several sectors, including railways, have been opened up to private  investment and the process for foreign investment approval has been simplified.
Some forecasters believe India will be growing even faster than China  in the next decade. India is at what I would call the take-off stage; while  gross domestic product growth has averaged about 7% over the past 10 years, I  think India could be headed toward growth rates of 8%–9% in the decade ahead if  reform efforts continue. Like China, India needs infrastructure.
Not only do emerging markets need infrastructure improvements, but  globally, existing infrastructure in many developed regions has aged and is in  need of significant repair, replacement or upgrade. A recent report from the  OECD (Organisation for Economic  Co-operation and Development)  revealed that the pace of essential structural reforms is slowing in many  advanced economies, while at the same time, many emerging economies have been  recently stepping up the pace of reforms.3 This accelerated pace of reform reflects the awareness of  bottlenecks and growth constraints, and the need to reduce vulnerabilities in  countries more sensitive to commodity price fluctuations, the report said. We  have seen how the recent drop in oil prices has helped spur reform efforts in  some emerging economies that have benefited from lower prices. They, thus, have  been able to take advantage of this by removing subsidies, which can be costly  for governments.
Sharply rising population and increasing wealth, coupled with  economic growth and urbanization trends, especially in emerging-market regions,  can support the development and accelerating growth of infrastructure assets.  Meanwhile, fiscal constraints and low growth rates in many large developed  economies could reduce potential government infrastructure spending in  developed markets over the next 20 years.
We are seeing emerging markets respond to this need for  infrastructure both by reforming and expanding at home as well as seeking  greater foreign investment, in many cases from other emerging markets. As part  of efforts to foster stronger relations with Latin America, China’s Premier Li  Keqiang visited Brazil, Colombia, Peru and Chile in May, reaching agreements on  production capacity cooperation and signing more than 70 cooperative documents  in energy, mining, infrastructure, and scientific and technological innovation.  The establishment of a US$30 billion fund to support production capacity  cooperation was also announced. China and the Eurasian Economic Union, whose  members include Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Russia, also signed a joint  declaration to begin working on an economic and trade cooperation deal.
In April, China’s President Xi Jinping visited the frontier market  of Pakistan, where various trade, energy and infrastructure agreements were  signed as part of a US$46 billion plan toward establishing a China-Pakistan  Economic Corridor, a network of roads, railways and pipelines.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited China in May where he  met with President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang. In addition to  cooperation agreements in sectors such as education and high-speed railways,  investment agreements in renewable energy, ports and industrial parks, together  worth about US$22 billion, were also signed by the two countries. Last month,  Modi also announced a US$1 billion credit line to support infrastructure  development in Mongolia.
We’ve also seen Brazil recently announce a new series of  infrastructure projects, where roads, bridges, tunnels and a number of other  projects will be privatized. Brazil has tried to privatize before, but in many  cases the terms were too tough and investors were turned off by the prospects  of funding unprofitable projects. Given weakness in Brazil’s economy today, the  government is revising its stance and making the project offerings more  attractive to investors. The winning bids will pay the government up front,  which will help relieve its budget problem. I believe that with the private  sector driving many of these new projects in Brazil, things will move faster  and hopefully, the amount of corruption can be reduced. During Chinese Premier  Li Keqiang’s trip to Brazil, more than 30 agreements worth a combined US$53  billion were signed in a number of sectors including infrastructure, trade,  energy and mining.
Meanwhile, Thailand has been investing outside its borders, and is  the second-largest foreign direct investor in Myanmar behind China, involved in  areas from oil and gas exploration to financial services. Myanmar has also  granted approvals to projects by investors in Japan, Singapore and South Korea.  According to Myanmar’s Directorate of Investment and Company Administration  (DICA), hundreds of companies in 38 foreign countries have so far invested more  than US$55 billion in 12 sectors in Myanmar.4 We think Myanmar has the promise to become a large, dynamic  market, and we see lots of potential opportunities there.
No matter where commodity prices are headed, we believe demand for  infrastructure in emerging markets will likely continue. For that reason, we continue  to be interested in natural resource stocks, as well as companies involved in  infrastructure development.
Mark Mobius’s comments, opinions and analyses are for  informational purposes only and should not be considered individual investment  advice or recommendations to invest in any security or to adopt any investment  strategy. Because market and economic conditions are subject to rapid change,  comments, opinions and analyses are rendered as of the date of the posting and  may change without notice. The material is not intended as a complete analysis  of every material fact regarding any country, region, market, industry,  investment or strategy.
Important Legal Information
All investments involve risks, including the possible loss of principal.  Investments in foreign securities involve special risks including currency  fluctuations, economic instability and political developments. Investments in  emerging markets, of which frontier markets are a subset, involve heightened  risks related to the same factors, in addition to those associated with these  markets’ smaller size, lesser liquidity and lack of established legal,  political, business and social frameworks to support securities markets.  Because these frameworks are typically even less developed in frontier markets,  as well as various factors including the increased potential for extreme price  volatility, illiquidity, trade barriers and exchange controls, the risks  associated with emerging markets are magnified in frontier markets. Stock  prices fluctuate, sometimes rapidly and dramatically, due to factors affecting  individual companies, particular industries or sectors, or general market  conditions.
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2. Source: US Energy  Information Administration Short-Term Energy Outlook, June 7, 2015. There is no  assurance that any estimate or forecast will be realized.
3. Source: OECD (2015),  “Economic Policy Reforms 2015, Going for Growth,” OECD Publishing, Paris. http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/growth-2015-en
PD3: Se preparan para el futuro…
El  fabricante aeronáutico europeo Airbus prevé que en 20 años la flota global de  aviones de más de 100 plazas se duplicará al pasar de los 19.000 actuales a  unos 38.500 gracias, sobre todo, al tirón del tráfico aéreo en los países  emergentes.
En sus previsiones publicadas  hoy, coincidiendo con la apertura del Salón Aeronáutico de Le Bourget, al norte  de París, indicó que de aquí a 2034 el crecimiento del transporte de  pasajeros por avión progresará a un ritmo medio del 4,6 % anual. Para  absorber esa evolución y la renovación de flotas de las compañías, harán faltas  unos 32.600 aviones de un valor de alrededor de 4,9 billones de dólares,  informa Efe.
Mientras en los países  desarrollados de Europa y Norteamérica el tráfico de pasajeros subirá a un 3,8  % anual, en las economías emergentes la cadencia será del 5,8 %, y una de las  consecuencias será que China se convertirá en el primer mercado (por delante de  EEUU) en un plazo de un decenio. Según sus estimaciones, mientras en la  actualidad un 25 % de la población de los países emergentes viaja en avión al  menos una vez al año, en dos décadas la proporción será del 74 %.
Megaaviones para megaciudades
Otra de las tendencias  destacadas es el peso de las que el estudio llama "megaciudades" en  el tráfico de larga distancia, ya que pasarán de suponer el 90 % ahora (con  900.000 pasajeros al día) al 95 % para 2034 (con 2,3 millones de pasajeros por  jornada). Por eso, Airbus calcula que de los 32.600 aeronaves que se  venderán en ese periodo, 9.600 serán de gran capacidad (dos o más pasillos),  con un valor de unos 2,7 billones de dólares.
Esas aeronaves de gran  capacidad, según sus cálculos, significarán en torno al 30 % del total  de las nuevas, pero el 55 % en valor. Y ahí es donde el constructor  europeo espera rentabilizar su avión gigante A380, cuyo despegue comercial está  tardando en llegar más de lo programado -de hecho el programa sólo debe empezar  a dar beneficios al grupo en 2015-.
En cuanto a los aparatos de un  solo pasillo, que son los que por el momento representan la gran fuente de  ingresos de Airbus -y de su rival estadounidense Boeing-, de aquí a 2034 se  venderán unos 23.000 por un valor de 2,2 billones de dólares.
Menos optimista que Boeing
Las previsiones de Airbus son,  en cualquier caso, un poco menos optimistas que las de Boeing, que la semana  pasada indicó que de aquí a 2034 se comercializarán 38.050 aviones nuevos, de  forma que la flota global subirá hasta 43.560. Según el grupo estadounidense,  las regiones Asia-Pacífico y Oriente Medio van a tener las mayores cadencias,  con una progresión del 2,7 % anual del número de aeronaves, mientras en  Latinoamérica y en África el ascenso será del 2,4 %, del 1,6 % en Europa y del  1,4 % en Norteamérica.
PD4: Cuando ves una iglesia de  lejos sabes que el Señor está dentro, en el Sagrario. Yo cuando paso cerca de  una iglesia suelo hacer una comunión espiritual, es decir, digo en bajo que me  gustaría recibirle con aquella pureza, humildad y devoción con que le recibía  la Virgen. En definitiva es como comulgar, pero sin comulgar. Y se puede hacer  muchas veces, tantas como iglesias pases por delante. Y mira que Madrid está  lleno… Me sirve para estar más con el Señor, llevarle más dentro de mí,  recuerdas, los cristianos somos unos sagrarios andantes…




 
 














