Hey, Global Investors: Time To Shop Around

New Investor Center - This content requires the free Adobe Flash player.

You probably know you need to look overseas to find strong growth, but hot markets such as China and India may seem overdone. Here are other leading markets for your money.

Hey, global investors, it's time to shop around.

Is China the next bubble?

But these days, a laser focus on the BRICs means you're overlooking great growth in other emerging economies, including Turkey, Indonesia, Mexico, Eastern and Central Europe, and Qatar. Yet that's where you'll find the same opportunities that led us overseas: sustainable growth at much cheaper prices than in the U.S. or, these days, in the BRICs.

With the U.S. market still playing catch-up and the developed world stalled, these are places you'll want to look if you hope to beat Wall Street.

Yes, this makes investing a little trickier. Information on new companies in young economies isn't as readily available to do-it-yourself investors as data on U.S. blue chips. Msn.Video.createWidget('PlayerAd1Container', 'PlayerAd', 304, 314, {"configCsid": "MSNmoney", "configName": "player-money-NIC-articles-inline", "player.vcq": "videoByUuids.aspx?uuids=043b0cf1-c85f-457e-ab03-6b2f02d90e68,3d93044c-493e-46d6-936c-aadbac183495,ec8b0515-1550-4381-bc16-93f3644e3c3d,99aba8cb-1e25-4c66-b08a-18ff912a57e4,3cda087f-9cc1-48e4-8d92-69b281f9bc0b,e035d5e6-6778-4569-9778-812082ade9cd,324caa67-9be3-4ce3-92be-6a9713f94bfa", "player.fr": "iv2_en-us_money_article_NIC-6PlacesInWorldToInvestNow-inline"}, 'PlayerAd1');Msn.Video.createWidget('Gallery4Container', 'Gallery', 304, 150, {"configCsid": "MSNmoney", "configName": "gallery-money-articles", "gallery.linkbackLocation": "bottom_left", "gallery.numColsGrid": "3", "gallery.categoryRequests": "videoByUuids.aspx?uuids=043b0cf1-c85f-457e-ab03-6b2f02d90e68,3d93044c-493e-46d6-936c-aadbac183495,ec8b0515-1550-4381-bc16-93f3644e3c3d,99aba8cb-1e25-4c66-b08a-18ff912a57e4,3cda087f-9cc1-48e4-8d92-69b281f9bc0b,e035d5e6-6778-4569-9778-812082ade9cd,324caa67-9be3-4ce3-92be-6a9713f94bfa;videoByTag.aspx%3Ftag%3Dmoney_dispatch%26ns%3DMSNmoney_Gallery%26mk%3Dus%26vs%3D1;videoByTag.aspx%3Ftag%3Dbest%2520of%2520money%26ns%3DMSNmoney_Gallery%26mk%3Dus%26vs%3D1"}, 'Gallery4');"In many cases, the companies are a lot less discovered," says Lewis Kaufman, who spends considerable time circling the globe as the portfolio manager of the Thornburg Developing World Fund (THDAX). "So it can be more difficult to find great investments outside of the BRICs.

"But," he adds, "when you find them, they can present wonderful opportunities."

So how do you find the best investments? A growing number of promising non-BRIC emerging-market stocks can be found on U.S. exchanges. But for broader and safer exposure, you can look to exchange-traded funds and mutual funds that cover these countries.

Find top-rated exchange-traded funds

I'll get to the names in a moment. But first, here's a review of the reasons to invest in emerging markets and branch out beyond the BRICS.Reason No. 1: Sustainable and superior growth From 2005 through 2009, the average U.S. large-blend mutual fund gained only 0.5% a year, according to Morningstar. Diversified emerging-markets funds advanced 13.2% a year, on average. The reason is simple: Emerging economies are growing much faster than those in the developed world.

In large part because developed countries have bought so much from emerging economies over the past several decades, in a kind of emerging-market Marshall Plan, those overseas economies can now stand on their own feet. They have their own growth paths and their own emerging middle classes hungry for cars, handbags and Kentucky Fried Chicken.

Last year, for the first time, emerging-market consumption surpassed consumption in the U.S., says JPMorgan Chase analyst Bruce Kasman. And over the past four years, emerging markets contributed more to global growth than all developed markets.

Kasman predicts emerging-market economies will grow 5.9% this year, compared with 2.3% growth for industrialized countries. Reason No. 2: The 'modern safe haven' It sounds strange to say this about a sector that has hit investors with the Asian currency collapse of the late 1990s and the outright takeover of private companies in Russia and Venezuela. But in many ways, emerging markets are now the "modern safe haven," says Jerome Booth, the head of research for Ashmore Investment Management, which specializes in emerging-market investing.

These nations have "decoupled" from the developed world, meaning they now show strong domestic growth and chart their own economic paths. Their regulators kept their banks from wading into the credit mess the way developed-world banks did, and they didn't experience housing bubbles. So while many economists now worry that the U.S. could slip into a double-dip recession as another wave of mortgage defaults hits this year, the emerging-world economies appear all but immune.

Indeed, while recession struck the developed world over the past two years, emerging-market economies kept on growing. "If the U.S. goes into depression, you want to be in emerging markets that have strong domestic growth," Booth says.

Their governments have also been more responsible with debt. While developed-world countries such as Greece, Spain, Portugal, Italy and Ireland are now skating close to the edge of bankruptcy, most emerging-market countries have comfortably low ratios of national debt to gross domestic product. Impressively, they're still stable by this measure, even though they did more than developed countries to combat any slowdown.

Continued: Currencies are risingMore from MSN Money

5 of the worst corporate boards

CEO's novel idea: Share the wealth

Why this is a rich man's recovery

The world's 30 best CEOs

Amazon vs. Apple: Battle of the books

 1 | 2 | 3 | next >

Rate this Article Click on one of the stars below to rate this article from 1 (lowest) to 5 (highest). LowThank you for rating.UGR('ratCntrl')High var avgRating=0;avgRating=7.125; if(avgRating!=0){avgRating=avgRating/2;avgRating=Math.round(avgRating*100)/100;var sDisplayText="Average rating: " + avgRating + " from ";var usersCount=48;sDisplayText = sDisplayText + usersCount;if (usersCount==1)sDisplayText=sDisplayText + " user";else sDisplayText=sDisplayText + " users";avgRatingElem=document.getElementById("averageRating");avgRatingElem.innerText=sDisplayText;} View all top-rated articlesE-mail us your comments on this article Discuss in a message board Cool ToolsMarket DispatchesTop Stocks blogQuote WatchlistTechnical AnalysisResearch Wizard StockScouter RatingsPick a brokerGlossary Search

Need answers fast? Find definitions for investing or financial terms.

Enter a term:Msn.Flash.Build('http://blstb.msn.com/i/BB/CA237289BFB4368EB4C4EA8225B66.swf', '9', 110, 159, 'left-rail-promo');Go to the New Investor Center Article IndexRecent Articles by Michael Brush5 of the worst corporate boards 03/30/2010Why this is a rich man's recovery 03/24/201017 health care stocks ready to roll 03/16/2010More . . .Fund data provided by Morningstar, Inc. © 2009. All rights reserved.StockScouter data provided by Gradient Analytics, Inc.Quotes supplied by Interactive Data.MSN Money's editorial goal is to provide a forum for personal finance and investment ideas. Our articles, columns, message board posts and other features should not be construed as investment advice, nor does their appearance imply an endorsement by Microsoft of any specific security or trading strategy. An investor's best course of action must be based on individual circumstances.Msn.Video.createWidget('Gallery8Container', 'Gallery', 500, 230, {"configCsid": "MSNmoney", "configName": "gallery-money-article-site-wide"}, 'Gallery8');msft.msn._ic.cid='qcq3hgpaakget74c383395nhmihv7wgc';msft.msn._ic.pst=false;msft.msn._ic.pgn=1; Join the discussion!Add a commentShow commentsSort by:Newest firstOldest first_uc2f12('iucGo');1 - 2 of 2PreviousNexth.klly #1Tuesday, April 06, 2010 8:21:35 PMPlaces to Make Money, or Make a Differnce??ReplyReport Abusec.a.ambriz #2Wednesday, April 07, 2010 11:42:25 AMOther options for investing in emerging markets are ADRs and country funds are also available for investors in the U.S.. See performance and compare it with the returns of their portfolio, add to it a possible return due to an appreciation of local currency.ReplyReport Abuse1 - 2 of 2PreviousNext_ucf13('0'); _iuc2Om1('MSNPortalInlineComments','Initial_Load_Comment_View','http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/learn-how-to-invest/6-places-to-make-money-now.aspx?','en-us');Are you sure you want to delete this comment?Report AbusePlease help us to maintain a healthy and vibrant community by reporting any illegal or inappropriate behavior. If you believe a message violates theCode of Conductplease notify us using the Report abuse form below. We will investigate your report and take appropriate action against offenders. We report all illegal activity to authorities.CategoriesSpam or advertisingChild pornography or exploitationProfanity, vulgarity or obscenityCopyright infringementHarassment or threatOtherAdditional comments(optional)100 character limit To add a comment, pleasesign inMSN privacyLegalAdvertiseRSSHelpFeedbackSite mapAbout our ads© 2010 Microsoft

"But," he adds, "when you find them, they can present wonderful opportunities."

So how do you find the best investments? A growing number of promising non-BRIC emerging-market stocks can be found on U.S. exchanges. But for broader and safer exposure, you can look to exchange-traded funds and mutual funds that cover these countries.

I'll get to the names in a moment. But first, here's a review of the reasons to invest in emerging markets and branch out beyond the BRICS.Reason No. 1: Sustainable and superior growth From 2005 through 2009, the average U.S. large-blend mutual fund gained only 0.5% a year, according to Morningstar. Diversified emerging-markets funds advanced 13.2% a year, on average. The reason is simple: Emerging economies are growing much faster than those in the developed world.

In large part because developed countries have bought so much from emerging economies over the past several decades, in a kind of emerging-market Marshall Plan, those overseas economies can now stand on their own feet. They have their own growth paths and their own emerging middle classes hungry for cars, handbags and Kentucky Fried Chicken.

Last year, for the first time, emerging-market consumption surpassed consumption in the U.S., says JPMorgan Chase analyst Bruce Kasman. And over the past four years, emerging markets contributed more to global growth than all developed markets.

Kasman predicts emerging-market economies will grow 5.9% this year, compared with 2.3% growth for industrialized countries. Reason No. 2: The 'modern safe haven' It sounds strange to say this about a sector that has hit investors with the Asian currency collapse of the late 1990s and the outright takeover of private companies in Russia and Venezuela. But in many ways, emerging markets are now the "modern safe haven," says Jerome Booth, the head of research for Ashmore Investment Management, which specializes in emerging-market investing.

These nations have "decoupled" from the developed world, meaning they now show strong domestic growth and chart their own economic paths. Their regulators kept their banks from wading into the credit mess the way developed-world banks did, and they didn't experience housing bubbles. So while many economists now worry that the U.S. could slip into a double-dip recession as another wave of mortgage defaults hits this year, the emerging-world economies appear all but immune.

Indeed, while recession struck the developed world over the past two years, emerging-market economies kept on growing. "If the U.S. goes into depression, you want to be in emerging markets that have strong domestic growth," Booth says.

Their governments have also been more responsible with debt. While developed-world countries such as Greece, Spain, Portugal, Italy and Ireland are now skating close to the edge of bankruptcy, most emerging-market countries have comfortably low ratios of national debt to gross domestic product. Impressively, they're still stable by this measure, even though they did more than developed countries to combat any slowdown.

Continued: Currencies are risingMore from MSN Money

 1 | 2 | 3 | next >

Need answers fast? Find definitions for investing or financial terms.

Read Full Article »


Comment
Show comments Hide Comments


Related Articles

Market Overview
Search Stock Quotes