Jerome Booth
Emerging Markets in an Upside Down World
Challenging Perceptions in Asset Allocation and Investment
Jerome Booth
Emerging Markets in an Upside Down World
Challenging Perceptions in Asset Allocation and Investment
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The world is upside down. The emerging market countries are more important than many investors realise. They have been catching up with the West over the past few decades. Greater market freedom has spread since the end of the Cold War, and with it institutional changes which have further assisted emerging economies in becoming more productive, flexible, and resilient. The Western financial crisis from 2008 has quickened the pace of the relative rise of emerging markets - their relative economic power, and with it political power, but also their financial power as savers, investors and…mehr
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The world is upside down. The emerging market countries are more important than many investors realise. They have been catching up with the West over the past few decades. Greater market freedom has spread since the end of the Cold War, and with it institutional changes which have further assisted emerging economies in becoming more productive, flexible, and resilient. The Western financial crisis from 2008 has quickened the pace of the relative rise of emerging markets - their relative economic power, and with it political power, but also their financial power as savers, investors and creditors.
Emerging Markets in an Upside Down World - Challenging Perceptions in Asset Allocation and Investment argues that finance theory has misunderstood risk and that this has led to poor investment decisions; and that emerging markets constitute a good example of why traditional finance theory is faulty. The book accurately describes the complex and changing global environment currently facing the investor and asset allocator. It raises many questions often bypassed because of the use of simplifying assumptions and models. The narrative builds towards a checklist of issues and questions for the asset allocator and investor and then to a discussion of a variety of regulatory and policy issues.
Aimed at institutional and retail investors as well as economics, finance, business and international relations students, Emerging Markets in an Upside Down World covers many complex ideas, but is written to be accessible to the non-expert.
Emerging Markets in an Upside Down World - Challenging Perceptions in Asset Allocation and Investment argues that finance theory has misunderstood risk and that this has led to poor investment decisions; and that emerging markets constitute a good example of why traditional finance theory is faulty. The book accurately describes the complex and changing global environment currently facing the investor and asset allocator. It raises many questions often bypassed because of the use of simplifying assumptions and models. The narrative builds towards a checklist of issues and questions for the asset allocator and investor and then to a discussion of a variety of regulatory and policy issues.
Aimed at institutional and retail investors as well as economics, finance, business and international relations students, Emerging Markets in an Upside Down World covers many complex ideas, but is written to be accessible to the non-expert.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Wiley Finance Series .1
- Verlag: Wiley & Sons
- 1. Auflage
- Seitenzahl: 280
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. April 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 246mm x 173mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 648g
- ISBN-13: 9781118879672
- ISBN-10: 1118879678
- Artikelnr.: 40372379
- Wiley Finance Series .1
- Verlag: Wiley & Sons
- 1. Auflage
- Seitenzahl: 280
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. April 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 246mm x 173mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 648g
- ISBN-13: 9781118879672
- ISBN-10: 1118879678
- Artikelnr.: 40372379
About the author DR JEROME BOOTH (London, England) is a well-known economist, emerging market expert, investor and entrepreneur. He is a sought after commentator on global economic events, was part of the MBO creating Ashmore Investment Management, which is now one of the world's leading investment managers dedicated to emerging markets and, until May 2013, served as its head of research. Through his private office, New Sparta, Jerome manages a number of his investments. He is the principal shareholder and Chairman of the UK phone company New Call Telecom. He is Chairman of the investigative news journalism company ExaroNews, and Chairman of Walpole Publishing which produces Moving On Magazine for school-leavers. He is also Chairman of New Sparta Films, which develops, finances and produces films, and also recently bought Icon Film Distribution UK. Jerome is also the principal shareholder of the Lloyds insurance broker, CBC UK Ltd. He is currently a visiting professor at Cass Business School, a governor of Anglia Ruskin University, chair of the Fitzwilliam Museum Development Trust, Deputy Chairman of the Britten Sinfonia and a council member of the Royal Philharmonic Society. All proceeds from the sale of this book are donated to the Ashmore Foundation, which supports charitable causes benefitting disadvantaged communities throughout the emerging markets. For more information on the work of the Ashmore Foundation and the charities it supports, please visit the website: www.ashmorefoundation.org
Foreword by Nigel Lawson xi Acknowledgements xiii Introduction 1 I.1 Upside
down: perception vs reality 2 I.2 The structure of the book 4 1
Globalisation and the Current Global Economy 9 1.1 What is globalisation? 9
1.2 Economic history and globalisation 12 1.2.1 The desire to control and
its impact on trade 13 1.2.2 The influence of money 15 1.2.3 Trade and
commodification 16 1.2.4 Nationalism 17 1.3 Recent globalisation 18 1.3.1
Bretton Woods 19 1.3.2 Ideological shifts 21 1.3.3 Participating in
globalisation: living with volatility 23 2 Defining Emerging Markets 25 2.1
The great global rebalancing 25 2.1.1 Financing sovereigns 26 2.1.2
Catching up 27 2.1.3 The poorest can also emerge: aid and debt 29
2.1.4 From debt to transparency and legitimacy 30 2.2 Investing in emerging
markets 31 2.3 Emerging market debt in the 20th century 32 2.3.1 Types of
external sovereign debt 33 2.3.2 FromMexican crisis to Brady bonds 36 2.3.3
Market discipline 39 2.3.4 Eastern Europe 40 2.3.5 Mexico in crisis again
41 2.3.6 The Asian and Russian crises 42 2.3.7 Emerging markets grow up 44
(a) The first change: country and contagion risks fall 44 (b) The second
change: the investor base 46 2.3.8 Testing robustness: Argentina defaults
47 2.3.9 The end of the self-fulfilling prophecy 48 2.4 The growth of local
currency debt 51 2.5 Why invest in emerging markets? 53 3 The 2008 Credit
Crunch and Aftermath 55 3.1 Bank regulation failure 58 3.1.1 Sub-prime 60
3.2 The 2008 crisis 63 3.3 Depression risk 64 3.3.1 Reducing the debt 66
3.3.2 Deleveraging is not an emerging market problem 67 3.4 Global central
bank imbalances 71 4 Limitations of Economics and Finance Theory 77 4.1
Theoretical thought and limitations 77 4.2 Economics, a vehicle for the
ruling ideology 78 4.3 Macroeconomics 79 4.4 Microeconomic foundations of
macroeconomics 81 4.4.1 Efficient market hypothesis 84 4.4.2 Modern
portfolio theory 87 4.4.3 Investment under uncertainty 88 4.5 Bounded
decisions and behavioural finance 90 5 What is Risk? 95 5.1 Specific and
systematic risk 99 5.2 Looking backwards 103 5.3 Uncertainty 104 5.4 Risk
and volatility 105 5.5 Risk in emerging markets 106 5.6 Rating agencies 108
5.7 Capacity, willingness, trust 109 5.7.1 Rich countries default by other
means 110 5.7.2 Two sets of risk in emerging markets 111 5.8 Sovereign
risk: a three-layer approach 114 5.9 Prejudice, risk and markets 116 5.9.1
When you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail 117 6 Core/Periphery
Disease 119 6.1 The core/periphery paradigm 120 6.1.1 Core breach? 121
6.1.2 Another core/periphery concept: decoupling 124 6.1.3 And another:
spreads 124 6.2 Beyond core/periphery 125 6.2.1 Towards a relative theory
of risk 125 6.2.2 GDP weighting 126 7 The Structure of Investment 131 7.1
Misaligned incentives 132 7.2 Confused incentives 134 7.3 Evolutionary
dynamics, institutional forms 135 7.3.1 History matters 137 7.4 Network
theory 138 7.5 Game theory 139 7.6 Investor structure and liquidity 140 7.7
Market segmentation 142 7.7.1 Warning signals 144 7.8 Investor base
structure matters 147 8 Asset Allocation 149 8.1 Asset classes 151 8.1.1
Alternatives 154 8.2 How asset allocation occurs today 155 8.2.1 Investor
types 156 8.2.2 Asset/liability management 158 8.3 From efficiency
frontiers to revealed preferences 161 8.4 Asset allocation vs manager
selection; active vs passive 164 8.5 Allocating at sea 167 9 Thinking
Strategically in the Investment Process 169 9.1 Thinking strategically 169
9.1.1 Thinking strategically: appropriate discounting 169 9.2 Scenario
planning 170 9.3 Global structural shifts ahead? 171 9.3.1 Asset
allocation: some proposed new rules 172 9.4 Investment process in emerging
debt 174 9.5 Conclusion 177 10 A New Way to Invest 179 10.1 Sense-checking
assumptions 180 10.1.1 Risk, uncertainty and information asymmetry
assumptions 181 10.1.2 Investor psychology and behaviour assumptions 185
10.1.3 Structure, market efficiency, equilibrium and market dynamics 187
10.1.4 Asset class definitions 188 10.2 Assessing liabilities 189 10.3 Your
constraints 190 10.3.1 The decision chain 190 10.3.2 Institutional
capabilities 191 10.3.3 Psychological constraints 191 10.4 Consider
changing your constraints: agency issues 192 10.5 Building scenarios 193
10.6 Understanding market structure 194 10.7 Asset allocation 195 10.7.1
Route 1: Comprehensive 196 10.7.2 Route 2: Entrepreneurial 197 10.7.3 Asset
allocation dynamics 198 10.8 Meta-allocation: toolset choice 199 10.9
Follow the skillset 200 10.10 Portfolio construction and monitoring 201 11
Regulation and Policy Lessons 203 11.1 Regulating financial institutions:
new and old lessons 204 11.1.1 Fix the banks 204 11.1.2 Non-banks: who
holds what? 206 11.1.3 Reduce agency problems: trustee incentives 206
11.1.4 Honour public service 207 11.1.5 Choice architecture 208 11.2 What
to do about systemic risk? 208 11.2.1 Avoid regulation that amplifies risk
209 11.2.2 Beware market segmentation 210 11.2.3 Structure matters 210
11.2.4 Map perceptions of risk 212 11.2.5 Detect and stop asset bubbles 212
11.2.6 Preserve credibility 213 11.3 Wish list for emerging market
policymakers 213 11.3.1 Allow markets to work 213 11.3.2 Proclaim and
foster greater pricing power 214 11.3.3 Promote EM global banks,
south-south linkages 214 11.3.4 Build capital markets 216 11.3.5 Fight
core/periphery disease 216 11.4 Reserve management and the international
monetary system 217 11.4.1 The dollar is your problem 217 11.4.2
Alternatives to the dollar 218 11.4.3 Too many reserves 221 11.5 What
investors can expect from HIDC policymakers 222 11.5.1 Financial repression
222 11.5.2 Consequences of financial repression for banks 223 11.5.3 No
early exit from quantitative easing? 223 11.5.4 Bond crash 224 11.5.5
Inflation 224 11.5.6 Appeals to foreign investors 224 11.5.7 Regulatory
muddle-through 224 11.5.8 Pension reform 225 11.5.9 Pension regulatory
conflict may only abate once EMinvestors exit 225 11.5.10 Rating agencies
225 11.5.11 Intellectual reassessment 225 11.6 What investors can expect
from emerging market policymakers 226 12 Conclusion 229 12.1 Afinal list...
229 12.2 ... for an upside down world 231 Further Research 233 Disclaimer
235 Glossary 237 Bibliography 245 Index 257
down: perception vs reality 2 I.2 The structure of the book 4 1
Globalisation and the Current Global Economy 9 1.1 What is globalisation? 9
1.2 Economic history and globalisation 12 1.2.1 The desire to control and
its impact on trade 13 1.2.2 The influence of money 15 1.2.3 Trade and
commodification 16 1.2.4 Nationalism 17 1.3 Recent globalisation 18 1.3.1
Bretton Woods 19 1.3.2 Ideological shifts 21 1.3.3 Participating in
globalisation: living with volatility 23 2 Defining Emerging Markets 25 2.1
The great global rebalancing 25 2.1.1 Financing sovereigns 26 2.1.2
Catching up 27 2.1.3 The poorest can also emerge: aid and debt 29
2.1.4 From debt to transparency and legitimacy 30 2.2 Investing in emerging
markets 31 2.3 Emerging market debt in the 20th century 32 2.3.1 Types of
external sovereign debt 33 2.3.2 FromMexican crisis to Brady bonds 36 2.3.3
Market discipline 39 2.3.4 Eastern Europe 40 2.3.5 Mexico in crisis again
41 2.3.6 The Asian and Russian crises 42 2.3.7 Emerging markets grow up 44
(a) The first change: country and contagion risks fall 44 (b) The second
change: the investor base 46 2.3.8 Testing robustness: Argentina defaults
47 2.3.9 The end of the self-fulfilling prophecy 48 2.4 The growth of local
currency debt 51 2.5 Why invest in emerging markets? 53 3 The 2008 Credit
Crunch and Aftermath 55 3.1 Bank regulation failure 58 3.1.1 Sub-prime 60
3.2 The 2008 crisis 63 3.3 Depression risk 64 3.3.1 Reducing the debt 66
3.3.2 Deleveraging is not an emerging market problem 67 3.4 Global central
bank imbalances 71 4 Limitations of Economics and Finance Theory 77 4.1
Theoretical thought and limitations 77 4.2 Economics, a vehicle for the
ruling ideology 78 4.3 Macroeconomics 79 4.4 Microeconomic foundations of
macroeconomics 81 4.4.1 Efficient market hypothesis 84 4.4.2 Modern
portfolio theory 87 4.4.3 Investment under uncertainty 88 4.5 Bounded
decisions and behavioural finance 90 5 What is Risk? 95 5.1 Specific and
systematic risk 99 5.2 Looking backwards 103 5.3 Uncertainty 104 5.4 Risk
and volatility 105 5.5 Risk in emerging markets 106 5.6 Rating agencies 108
5.7 Capacity, willingness, trust 109 5.7.1 Rich countries default by other
means 110 5.7.2 Two sets of risk in emerging markets 111 5.8 Sovereign
risk: a three-layer approach 114 5.9 Prejudice, risk and markets 116 5.9.1
When you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail 117 6 Core/Periphery
Disease 119 6.1 The core/periphery paradigm 120 6.1.1 Core breach? 121
6.1.2 Another core/periphery concept: decoupling 124 6.1.3 And another:
spreads 124 6.2 Beyond core/periphery 125 6.2.1 Towards a relative theory
of risk 125 6.2.2 GDP weighting 126 7 The Structure of Investment 131 7.1
Misaligned incentives 132 7.2 Confused incentives 134 7.3 Evolutionary
dynamics, institutional forms 135 7.3.1 History matters 137 7.4 Network
theory 138 7.5 Game theory 139 7.6 Investor structure and liquidity 140 7.7
Market segmentation 142 7.7.1 Warning signals 144 7.8 Investor base
structure matters 147 8 Asset Allocation 149 8.1 Asset classes 151 8.1.1
Alternatives 154 8.2 How asset allocation occurs today 155 8.2.1 Investor
types 156 8.2.2 Asset/liability management 158 8.3 From efficiency
frontiers to revealed preferences 161 8.4 Asset allocation vs manager
selection; active vs passive 164 8.5 Allocating at sea 167 9 Thinking
Strategically in the Investment Process 169 9.1 Thinking strategically 169
9.1.1 Thinking strategically: appropriate discounting 169 9.2 Scenario
planning 170 9.3 Global structural shifts ahead? 171 9.3.1 Asset
allocation: some proposed new rules 172 9.4 Investment process in emerging
debt 174 9.5 Conclusion 177 10 A New Way to Invest 179 10.1 Sense-checking
assumptions 180 10.1.1 Risk, uncertainty and information asymmetry
assumptions 181 10.1.2 Investor psychology and behaviour assumptions 185
10.1.3 Structure, market efficiency, equilibrium and market dynamics 187
10.1.4 Asset class definitions 188 10.2 Assessing liabilities 189 10.3 Your
constraints 190 10.3.1 The decision chain 190 10.3.2 Institutional
capabilities 191 10.3.3 Psychological constraints 191 10.4 Consider
changing your constraints: agency issues 192 10.5 Building scenarios 193
10.6 Understanding market structure 194 10.7 Asset allocation 195 10.7.1
Route 1: Comprehensive 196 10.7.2 Route 2: Entrepreneurial 197 10.7.3 Asset
allocation dynamics 198 10.8 Meta-allocation: toolset choice 199 10.9
Follow the skillset 200 10.10 Portfolio construction and monitoring 201 11
Regulation and Policy Lessons 203 11.1 Regulating financial institutions:
new and old lessons 204 11.1.1 Fix the banks 204 11.1.2 Non-banks: who
holds what? 206 11.1.3 Reduce agency problems: trustee incentives 206
11.1.4 Honour public service 207 11.1.5 Choice architecture 208 11.2 What
to do about systemic risk? 208 11.2.1 Avoid regulation that amplifies risk
209 11.2.2 Beware market segmentation 210 11.2.3 Structure matters 210
11.2.4 Map perceptions of risk 212 11.2.5 Detect and stop asset bubbles 212
11.2.6 Preserve credibility 213 11.3 Wish list for emerging market
policymakers 213 11.3.1 Allow markets to work 213 11.3.2 Proclaim and
foster greater pricing power 214 11.3.3 Promote EM global banks,
south-south linkages 214 11.3.4 Build capital markets 216 11.3.5 Fight
core/periphery disease 216 11.4 Reserve management and the international
monetary system 217 11.4.1 The dollar is your problem 217 11.4.2
Alternatives to the dollar 218 11.4.3 Too many reserves 221 11.5 What
investors can expect from HIDC policymakers 222 11.5.1 Financial repression
222 11.5.2 Consequences of financial repression for banks 223 11.5.3 No
early exit from quantitative easing? 223 11.5.4 Bond crash 224 11.5.5
Inflation 224 11.5.6 Appeals to foreign investors 224 11.5.7 Regulatory
muddle-through 224 11.5.8 Pension reform 225 11.5.9 Pension regulatory
conflict may only abate once EMinvestors exit 225 11.5.10 Rating agencies
225 11.5.11 Intellectual reassessment 225 11.6 What investors can expect
from emerging market policymakers 226 12 Conclusion 229 12.1 Afinal list...
229 12.2 ... for an upside down world 231 Further Research 233 Disclaimer
235 Glossary 237 Bibliography 245 Index 257
Foreword by Nigel Lawson xi Acknowledgements xiii Introduction 1 I.1 Upside
down: perception vs reality 2 I.2 The structure of the book 4 1
Globalisation and the Current Global Economy 9 1.1 What is globalisation? 9
1.2 Economic history and globalisation 12 1.2.1 The desire to control and
its impact on trade 13 1.2.2 The influence of money 15 1.2.3 Trade and
commodification 16 1.2.4 Nationalism 17 1.3 Recent globalisation 18 1.3.1
Bretton Woods 19 1.3.2 Ideological shifts 21 1.3.3 Participating in
globalisation: living with volatility 23 2 Defining Emerging Markets 25 2.1
The great global rebalancing 25 2.1.1 Financing sovereigns 26 2.1.2
Catching up 27 2.1.3 The poorest can also emerge: aid and debt 29
2.1.4 From debt to transparency and legitimacy 30 2.2 Investing in emerging
markets 31 2.3 Emerging market debt in the 20th century 32 2.3.1 Types of
external sovereign debt 33 2.3.2 FromMexican crisis to Brady bonds 36 2.3.3
Market discipline 39 2.3.4 Eastern Europe 40 2.3.5 Mexico in crisis again
41 2.3.6 The Asian and Russian crises 42 2.3.7 Emerging markets grow up 44
(a) The first change: country and contagion risks fall 44 (b) The second
change: the investor base 46 2.3.8 Testing robustness: Argentina defaults
47 2.3.9 The end of the self-fulfilling prophecy 48 2.4 The growth of local
currency debt 51 2.5 Why invest in emerging markets? 53 3 The 2008 Credit
Crunch and Aftermath 55 3.1 Bank regulation failure 58 3.1.1 Sub-prime 60
3.2 The 2008 crisis 63 3.3 Depression risk 64 3.3.1 Reducing the debt 66
3.3.2 Deleveraging is not an emerging market problem 67 3.4 Global central
bank imbalances 71 4 Limitations of Economics and Finance Theory 77 4.1
Theoretical thought and limitations 77 4.2 Economics, a vehicle for the
ruling ideology 78 4.3 Macroeconomics 79 4.4 Microeconomic foundations of
macroeconomics 81 4.4.1 Efficient market hypothesis 84 4.4.2 Modern
portfolio theory 87 4.4.3 Investment under uncertainty 88 4.5 Bounded
decisions and behavioural finance 90 5 What is Risk? 95 5.1 Specific and
systematic risk 99 5.2 Looking backwards 103 5.3 Uncertainty 104 5.4 Risk
and volatility 105 5.5 Risk in emerging markets 106 5.6 Rating agencies 108
5.7 Capacity, willingness, trust 109 5.7.1 Rich countries default by other
means 110 5.7.2 Two sets of risk in emerging markets 111 5.8 Sovereign
risk: a three-layer approach 114 5.9 Prejudice, risk and markets 116 5.9.1
When you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail 117 6 Core/Periphery
Disease 119 6.1 The core/periphery paradigm 120 6.1.1 Core breach? 121
6.1.2 Another core/periphery concept: decoupling 124 6.1.3 And another:
spreads 124 6.2 Beyond core/periphery 125 6.2.1 Towards a relative theory
of risk 125 6.2.2 GDP weighting 126 7 The Structure of Investment 131 7.1
Misaligned incentives 132 7.2 Confused incentives 134 7.3 Evolutionary
dynamics, institutional forms 135 7.3.1 History matters 137 7.4 Network
theory 138 7.5 Game theory 139 7.6 Investor structure and liquidity 140 7.7
Market segmentation 142 7.7.1 Warning signals 144 7.8 Investor base
structure matters 147 8 Asset Allocation 149 8.1 Asset classes 151 8.1.1
Alternatives 154 8.2 How asset allocation occurs today 155 8.2.1 Investor
types 156 8.2.2 Asset/liability management 158 8.3 From efficiency
frontiers to revealed preferences 161 8.4 Asset allocation vs manager
selection; active vs passive 164 8.5 Allocating at sea 167 9 Thinking
Strategically in the Investment Process 169 9.1 Thinking strategically 169
9.1.1 Thinking strategically: appropriate discounting 169 9.2 Scenario
planning 170 9.3 Global structural shifts ahead? 171 9.3.1 Asset
allocation: some proposed new rules 172 9.4 Investment process in emerging
debt 174 9.5 Conclusion 177 10 A New Way to Invest 179 10.1 Sense-checking
assumptions 180 10.1.1 Risk, uncertainty and information asymmetry
assumptions 181 10.1.2 Investor psychology and behaviour assumptions 185
10.1.3 Structure, market efficiency, equilibrium and market dynamics 187
10.1.4 Asset class definitions 188 10.2 Assessing liabilities 189 10.3 Your
constraints 190 10.3.1 The decision chain 190 10.3.2 Institutional
capabilities 191 10.3.3 Psychological constraints 191 10.4 Consider
changing your constraints: agency issues 192 10.5 Building scenarios 193
10.6 Understanding market structure 194 10.7 Asset allocation 195 10.7.1
Route 1: Comprehensive 196 10.7.2 Route 2: Entrepreneurial 197 10.7.3 Asset
allocation dynamics 198 10.8 Meta-allocation: toolset choice 199 10.9
Follow the skillset 200 10.10 Portfolio construction and monitoring 201 11
Regulation and Policy Lessons 203 11.1 Regulating financial institutions:
new and old lessons 204 11.1.1 Fix the banks 204 11.1.2 Non-banks: who
holds what? 206 11.1.3 Reduce agency problems: trustee incentives 206
11.1.4 Honour public service 207 11.1.5 Choice architecture 208 11.2 What
to do about systemic risk? 208 11.2.1 Avoid regulation that amplifies risk
209 11.2.2 Beware market segmentation 210 11.2.3 Structure matters 210
11.2.4 Map perceptions of risk 212 11.2.5 Detect and stop asset bubbles 212
11.2.6 Preserve credibility 213 11.3 Wish list for emerging market
policymakers 213 11.3.1 Allow markets to work 213 11.3.2 Proclaim and
foster greater pricing power 214 11.3.3 Promote EM global banks,
south-south linkages 214 11.3.4 Build capital markets 216 11.3.5 Fight
core/periphery disease 216 11.4 Reserve management and the international
monetary system 217 11.4.1 The dollar is your problem 217 11.4.2
Alternatives to the dollar 218 11.4.3 Too many reserves 221 11.5 What
investors can expect from HIDC policymakers 222 11.5.1 Financial repression
222 11.5.2 Consequences of financial repression for banks 223 11.5.3 No
early exit from quantitative easing? 223 11.5.4 Bond crash 224 11.5.5
Inflation 224 11.5.6 Appeals to foreign investors 224 11.5.7 Regulatory
muddle-through 224 11.5.8 Pension reform 225 11.5.9 Pension regulatory
conflict may only abate once EMinvestors exit 225 11.5.10 Rating agencies
225 11.5.11 Intellectual reassessment 225 11.6 What investors can expect
from emerging market policymakers 226 12 Conclusion 229 12.1 Afinal list...
229 12.2 ... for an upside down world 231 Further Research 233 Disclaimer
235 Glossary 237 Bibliography 245 Index 257
down: perception vs reality 2 I.2 The structure of the book 4 1
Globalisation and the Current Global Economy 9 1.1 What is globalisation? 9
1.2 Economic history and globalisation 12 1.2.1 The desire to control and
its impact on trade 13 1.2.2 The influence of money 15 1.2.3 Trade and
commodification 16 1.2.4 Nationalism 17 1.3 Recent globalisation 18 1.3.1
Bretton Woods 19 1.3.2 Ideological shifts 21 1.3.3 Participating in
globalisation: living with volatility 23 2 Defining Emerging Markets 25 2.1
The great global rebalancing 25 2.1.1 Financing sovereigns 26 2.1.2
Catching up 27 2.1.3 The poorest can also emerge: aid and debt 29
2.1.4 From debt to transparency and legitimacy 30 2.2 Investing in emerging
markets 31 2.3 Emerging market debt in the 20th century 32 2.3.1 Types of
external sovereign debt 33 2.3.2 FromMexican crisis to Brady bonds 36 2.3.3
Market discipline 39 2.3.4 Eastern Europe 40 2.3.5 Mexico in crisis again
41 2.3.6 The Asian and Russian crises 42 2.3.7 Emerging markets grow up 44
(a) The first change: country and contagion risks fall 44 (b) The second
change: the investor base 46 2.3.8 Testing robustness: Argentina defaults
47 2.3.9 The end of the self-fulfilling prophecy 48 2.4 The growth of local
currency debt 51 2.5 Why invest in emerging markets? 53 3 The 2008 Credit
Crunch and Aftermath 55 3.1 Bank regulation failure 58 3.1.1 Sub-prime 60
3.2 The 2008 crisis 63 3.3 Depression risk 64 3.3.1 Reducing the debt 66
3.3.2 Deleveraging is not an emerging market problem 67 3.4 Global central
bank imbalances 71 4 Limitations of Economics and Finance Theory 77 4.1
Theoretical thought and limitations 77 4.2 Economics, a vehicle for the
ruling ideology 78 4.3 Macroeconomics 79 4.4 Microeconomic foundations of
macroeconomics 81 4.4.1 Efficient market hypothesis 84 4.4.2 Modern
portfolio theory 87 4.4.3 Investment under uncertainty 88 4.5 Bounded
decisions and behavioural finance 90 5 What is Risk? 95 5.1 Specific and
systematic risk 99 5.2 Looking backwards 103 5.3 Uncertainty 104 5.4 Risk
and volatility 105 5.5 Risk in emerging markets 106 5.6 Rating agencies 108
5.7 Capacity, willingness, trust 109 5.7.1 Rich countries default by other
means 110 5.7.2 Two sets of risk in emerging markets 111 5.8 Sovereign
risk: a three-layer approach 114 5.9 Prejudice, risk and markets 116 5.9.1
When you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail 117 6 Core/Periphery
Disease 119 6.1 The core/periphery paradigm 120 6.1.1 Core breach? 121
6.1.2 Another core/periphery concept: decoupling 124 6.1.3 And another:
spreads 124 6.2 Beyond core/periphery 125 6.2.1 Towards a relative theory
of risk 125 6.2.2 GDP weighting 126 7 The Structure of Investment 131 7.1
Misaligned incentives 132 7.2 Confused incentives 134 7.3 Evolutionary
dynamics, institutional forms 135 7.3.1 History matters 137 7.4 Network
theory 138 7.5 Game theory 139 7.6 Investor structure and liquidity 140 7.7
Market segmentation 142 7.7.1 Warning signals 144 7.8 Investor base
structure matters 147 8 Asset Allocation 149 8.1 Asset classes 151 8.1.1
Alternatives 154 8.2 How asset allocation occurs today 155 8.2.1 Investor
types 156 8.2.2 Asset/liability management 158 8.3 From efficiency
frontiers to revealed preferences 161 8.4 Asset allocation vs manager
selection; active vs passive 164 8.5 Allocating at sea 167 9 Thinking
Strategically in the Investment Process 169 9.1 Thinking strategically 169
9.1.1 Thinking strategically: appropriate discounting 169 9.2 Scenario
planning 170 9.3 Global structural shifts ahead? 171 9.3.1 Asset
allocation: some proposed new rules 172 9.4 Investment process in emerging
debt 174 9.5 Conclusion 177 10 A New Way to Invest 179 10.1 Sense-checking
assumptions 180 10.1.1 Risk, uncertainty and information asymmetry
assumptions 181 10.1.2 Investor psychology and behaviour assumptions 185
10.1.3 Structure, market efficiency, equilibrium and market dynamics 187
10.1.4 Asset class definitions 188 10.2 Assessing liabilities 189 10.3 Your
constraints 190 10.3.1 The decision chain 190 10.3.2 Institutional
capabilities 191 10.3.3 Psychological constraints 191 10.4 Consider
changing your constraints: agency issues 192 10.5 Building scenarios 193
10.6 Understanding market structure 194 10.7 Asset allocation 195 10.7.1
Route 1: Comprehensive 196 10.7.2 Route 2: Entrepreneurial 197 10.7.3 Asset
allocation dynamics 198 10.8 Meta-allocation: toolset choice 199 10.9
Follow the skillset 200 10.10 Portfolio construction and monitoring 201 11
Regulation and Policy Lessons 203 11.1 Regulating financial institutions:
new and old lessons 204 11.1.1 Fix the banks 204 11.1.2 Non-banks: who
holds what? 206 11.1.3 Reduce agency problems: trustee incentives 206
11.1.4 Honour public service 207 11.1.5 Choice architecture 208 11.2 What
to do about systemic risk? 208 11.2.1 Avoid regulation that amplifies risk
209 11.2.2 Beware market segmentation 210 11.2.3 Structure matters 210
11.2.4 Map perceptions of risk 212 11.2.5 Detect and stop asset bubbles 212
11.2.6 Preserve credibility 213 11.3 Wish list for emerging market
policymakers 213 11.3.1 Allow markets to work 213 11.3.2 Proclaim and
foster greater pricing power 214 11.3.3 Promote EM global banks,
south-south linkages 214 11.3.4 Build capital markets 216 11.3.5 Fight
core/periphery disease 216 11.4 Reserve management and the international
monetary system 217 11.4.1 The dollar is your problem 217 11.4.2
Alternatives to the dollar 218 11.4.3 Too many reserves 221 11.5 What
investors can expect from HIDC policymakers 222 11.5.1 Financial repression
222 11.5.2 Consequences of financial repression for banks 223 11.5.3 No
early exit from quantitative easing? 223 11.5.4 Bond crash 224 11.5.5
Inflation 224 11.5.6 Appeals to foreign investors 224 11.5.7 Regulatory
muddle-through 224 11.5.8 Pension reform 225 11.5.9 Pension regulatory
conflict may only abate once EMinvestors exit 225 11.5.10 Rating agencies
225 11.5.11 Intellectual reassessment 225 11.6 What investors can expect
from emerging market policymakers 226 12 Conclusion 229 12.1 Afinal list...
229 12.2 ... for an upside down world 231 Further Research 233 Disclaimer
235 Glossary 237 Bibliography 245 Index 257