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Wait for Dollar Drop Before Buying Emerging Market Stocks, Citi Says

Wait for Dollar Drop Before Buying Emerging Market Stocks, Citi Says

(Bloomberg) -- Investors keen to take on board more risk and buy emerging market equities should wait for changes in two key signals -- a jump in Chinese money supply growth and a break lower in the dollar.

That’s the view of Citigroup Inc. strategists including Jeremy Hale, who are keeping a more cautious stance on developing-nation stocks until signs of fundamental growth improve, as positive sentiment on trade has failed to kick-start a period of outperformance for the asset class.

“When China nominal policy rate easing, that Citi expects in 2020, feeds through to M2 growth, we may see a more pronounced inflection point for improved EM risk taking,” the strategists wrote in a note Thursday. “For us, a turn in the dollar is also one of our signals for increasing EM exposure.”

Wait for Dollar Drop Before Buying Emerging Market Stocks, Citi Says

Renewed expectations of a phase one U.S.-China trade deal and hope the global economic slowdown has ended have seen developed-market stocks hit an all-time high this month, taking the MSCI World Index’s run this year to 22%. That compares with just a 9% year-to-date rise in the MSCI Emerging Market Index, which remains well below its 2007 peak.

China’s easing of monetary policy has so far been more about its currency, and a weaker yuan is not necessarily positive for local risk assets, according to the Citi strategists. A boost to money supply however, would encourage private consumption, lending and investment -- which would be bullish for EM assets, they said.

Wait for Dollar Drop Before Buying Emerging Market Stocks, Citi Says

Meanwhile, a weaker dollar is typically positive for commodities, which may also boost emerging market outperformance given relative terms of trade, they added.

Wait for Dollar Drop Before Buying Emerging Market Stocks, Citi Says

The strategists are watching for a break lower toward 1190 in the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index, about 1.5% below Friday’s level of 1209.

To contact the reporter on this story: Cormac Mullen in Tokyo at cmullen9@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Christopher Anstey at canstey@bloomberg.net, Adam Haigh, Joanna Ossinger

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