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Hedge Fund That Called Emerging-Market Selloff Sees Turnaround

The hedge fund veteran who predicted the peak of the emerging-market rally says a seven-month rout is almost over.

Hedge Fund That Called Emerging-Market Selloff Sees Turnaround
Employees work in booths at the Borsa Istanbul SA stock exchange in Istanbul, Turkey. (Photographer: Ismail Ferdous/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- The hedge fund veteran who predicted the peak of the emerging-market rally says a seven-month rout is almost over.

Hedge Fund That Called Emerging-Market Selloff Sees Turnaround

Jordi Visser, chief investment officer at the $1.7 billion hedge fund Weiss Multi-Strategy Advisers in New York, said a turnaround may be near. Since he called a "significant correction" in late January, MSCI’s gauge of developing-nation shares has plummeted 19.9 percent and currencies from Argentina to Turkey have hit record lows, leading to fear of contagion across emerging markets.

"I think we are through most of the damage in terms of time, but I’m not sure yet on the price impact," said Visser, 51, citing value in the Brazilian real, Mexican peso and Chinese Internet stocks. "In terms of time-to-price relationship, I think that depends on the Fed and global coordination."

Hedge Fund That Called Emerging-Market Selloff Sees Turnaround

The hedge fund manager’s optimism comes as a growing cadre of investors run for the exits, citing among other reasons the U.S. Federal Reserve’s steady pace of interest-rate hikes. Portfolio flows into emerging markets slowed to $2.2 billion last month from $13.7 billion in July, according to the Institute of International Finance in Washington.

In January, just before the selloff, Visser warned that "people don’t seem worried about anything." The challenge to conventional thinking paid off: The fund is up 6 percent this year, according to Rachael Collins, a spokesperson for the firm.

In the ensuing months, emerging markets got hit by a flurry of setbacks. The Trump administration ratcheted up its tit-for-tat tariff battle with Beijing and slapped sanctions on countries from Venezuela to Turkey and Russia, all while the dollar climbed to its strongest in more than a year. Rising U.S. rates, meantime, exposed some of the most vulnerable developing economies.

Visser said easing or accomodative policies by the Fed and increasing global coordination would typically signal the end to a selloff in emerging markets. The backdrop today is far messier with sanctions, tariffs and more Fed tightening. As a result, investors should be more patient diving back into Turkey, Argentina, South Africa and Russia, he said.

"If they [the Fed] did pause for any reason, it would be a very good starting point to look at EM opportunities," he said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Ben Bartenstein in New York at bbartenstei3@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Rita Nazareth at rnazareth@bloomberg.net, Alec D.B. McCabe, Philip Sanders

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