President Obama is visiting Mexico this week and as stated in
the WSJ article--The Rise of the 'Aztec Tiger'--he will find the
country very different from its usual image here. Mexico is
currently going through a turnaround under the new president.
We have been positive on the Mexico ETF for quite some time and
it remains one of our top choices among the Emerging Markets ETFs,
with a Zacks ETF #1 (Strong Buy) rank. It is an excellent long-term
investment for the reasons stated below. (Read: 3 REIT ETFs you
should not ignore)
President Nieto Delivering on His Promises
President Nieto seems committed to shaking up the economy by
introducing critical reforms in important areas. Within about four
months of assuming office, he has initiated action on reforms in
telecom, energy and education sectors and revamping tax codes. He
also signed a new law that restricts injections used in the past by
vested interests to block regulatory measures.
Further, he has demonstrated that he is not afraid to take on
powerful individuals and institutions, in order to tackle
corruption. (Read: 3 Red Hot Dividend ETFs)
Economists think that these critical reforms could push growth
to about 6%. Both S&P and Fitch have expressed optimism about
the reforms and indicated that the country’s credit rating (already
investment grade) could be upgraded further.
Economy on sound footing; Fiscal consolidation on
track
As a result of open market policies, fiscal discipline, labor
reforms and prudent macroeconomic measures adopted by the country,
the economy has been on a sound footing--currently growing at about
4%.
Things look good on the fiscal front as well, with a budget
deficit of just 2.5% of GDP compared with 8.6% of GDP for the US,
for 2011. Gross debt stands at about 43% of GDP, compared with more
than 107% for the US, per IMF.
While credit as a percentage of GDP has doubled in Brazil to
about 50% in last ten years and the credit boom seems to be finally
coming to an end; in Mexico, it is about 20%, indicating
significant room for expansion. (Read: Buy these ETFs to profit
from Japan’s massive easing)
The central bank left the benchmark rate unchanged last week,
though inflation touched 4.7% earlier this month, as it expects
inflation to come down to about 3% later this year.
Thanks to surging foreign investments, foreign exchange reserves
touched a new high of $167 billion rcently and the Peso has
appreciated more than 5% against the US dollar this year.
New China of manufacturing?
China’s average manufacturing wages, when adjusted for
productivity, are above those in Mexico now, according to a study
conducted by the Boston Consulting Group (BCG). BCG forecasts that
by 2015, the fully loaded cost of hiring Chinese workers will be
25% higher than the cost of hiring Mexican workers.
Further, Mexico’s proximity to the U.S. means that the companies
can ship goods to the customers much faster and at a much
lower cost—as the price of oil has gone up three times since the
start of the century. Moreover, the goods coming from Mexico can
enter the US duty-free due to NAFTA.
Further, the two leaders are expected to address regulatory and
border issues this week, to foster more cross-border trade.
As a result, many US manufacturers are now shifting production
to Mexico from China. Last year, Mexico’s manufactured exports were
more than the rest of Latin America combined. Based on current
trends, it is estimated that by 2018 America will import more from
Mexico than from any other country.
Rising Middle Class and Soaring Consumption
As a result of macroeconomic stability, middle class wealth has
been rising. Average income has doubled in the past 15 years
and the average number of school years Mexicans attend has doubled
in the past four decades.
Improving education and skills, and rising participation of
women in the workforce has led to improving family incomes.
Rising family incomes and urbanization have resulted in upward
mobility and increasing consumption. Going forward, domestic
consumption is expected to continue to fuel growth.
iShares MSCI Mexico Capped Investable Market Index
Fund (EWW)
Launched in March 1996, the fund now has more than $3.1 billion
in AUM. The assets are invested in a basket of 46 holdings; America
Movil occupies the top spot with almost 18% asset allocation.
Among sectors, Consumer Staples have the heaviest allocation
(29%) while Telecom and Materials round out the top three. Thanks
to its heavy exposure to consumer staples and telecom sectors, the
fund will benefit from growing consumer demand in the country.
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ISHARS-MEXICO (EWW): ETF Research Reports
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iShares MSCI Mexico ETF (AMEX:EWW)
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iShares MSCI Mexico ETF (AMEX:EWW)
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