Russia, China prove cheap to investors as money flows rise
One is mired in political strife and the other faces slowdown, yet both see surge in ETF flows
For all the concern about the prospect of tougher international sanctions and signs of slowing growth, more money flowed last month into Russia and China exchange-traded funds than any other emerging markets.
US-based ETFs focused on Russia attracted US$265 million last month, or 14 per cent of their market value, the most among 47 regions after Portugal and Hong Kong.
That was followed by mainland Chinese funds, which drew US$944 million, equivalent to 10 per cent of their value.
Traders added to their Russian holdings as the six-month old conflict with Ukraine pushed the benchmark Micex Index to the steepest discount to emerging-market peers since 2008.
"It appears that investors don't believe that the situation in Russia will worsen much further from where we are now and expect the indices to bounce again from oversold levels," said Elena Ogram, a Zurich-based investor at Bank Bellevue.
Mainland stocks are buoyed by the prospect of economic stimulus from the government, she said.
The Shanghai Composite Index rose to a 15-month high as growth in mainland service industries accelerated and the risk of protests in Hong Kong's financial district eased.