In the modern day we see many of the emerging economies of the world moving forward with high growth while in contrast many of the mature western economies have anaemic growth at best. This was reinforced last week with the UK reporting preliminary quarterly growth of 0.3% (1.3% annualised) while the US fared better with an annualised 2.5%. In contrast on the 15 April 2013 we heard that China was growing at 7.7%. Does this mean we should all be selling our mature market equities and loading up on emerging markets? Or do we get enough benefit from the fact that many mature market companies are exposed to high growth markets?
To try and get an idea I ran the Google search “the best performing stock market in the world” and was rewarded with the result that in 2012 the Venezuela IBC returned around 300%. I was disappointed with this result and the majority of the other Google results for three main reasons:
- As a private investor are we really going to put a significant portion of our wealth into the Venezuela stock market? Or the Turkish XU100, Egyptian EGX, Pakistan KSE or the Kenya NSE for that matter? Well as somebody who is searching for consistent return over many years I know I’m not.
- The majority of results simply show the performance of the major stock market within each country. This is flawed because each of these markets is priced in the local currency of each country and we all know that currencies move for all manner of reasons including varying rates of currency devaluation caused by inflation. You therefore cannot compare one with the other as they have different units. It would be like saying Car A which is travelling at 110 km/hour is going faster than Car B which is travelling at 100 miles/hour. A clearly ludicrous statement.
- As the results only use the major stock market for each country they are only looking at the capital gain of each of these markets. If we truly want to understand the best performing market then we should also consider the contribution from dividends because dividends matter.
Let’s therefore answer the question from a personal long term investor perspective while considering the three points above.