Tuesday November 24, 2009 7:23 PM ET
SmartMoney
Published May 27, 2009  |  A A A
SmartMoney Magazine by Elizabeth O'Brien (Author Archive)

Bargains in Re-Emerging Markets

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As the U.S. struggles to reverse the economic slide, some emerging markets are ahead of the game. The International Monetary Fund projects that while the world’s advanced economies will contract this year, emerging economies will expand by as much as 2.5 percent, and some countries will grow a lot faster. Even better news: Some pros are finding they don’t have to pay a lot to own profitable foreign stocks. The valuations on foreign stocks have become “very, very attractive,” says Uri Landesman, chief equity strategist for asset manager ING Investment Management Americas.

It was only two years ago that investors plowed more than $16 billion into emerging-market mutual funds, trying to find the next big Chinese Internet start-up or Russian coal mine. Unfortunately, like many investing trends, a lot of people piled into emerging-market stocks just as they peaked. Growth did slow around the world, and the stocks tanked. Even with this spring’s market rally, emerging-market stocks, as a group, have lost more than 40 percent since October 2007.

However, many of these nations are not mired in the housing market disasters that plague wealthier countries, and their banking systems are healthier as a consequence. Meanwhile, millions of people in these nations are moving into their middle class. The fortunes of these countries aren’t completely beholden to the health of the U.S. economy, either. China’s economy, for example, is expected to grow at least 5 percent in 2009.
For decades, stocks in China, Chile and other emerging nations traded at a significant discount to their American counterparts. By mid-2007, some were trading at a premium. The market wipeout brought emerging-market valuations closer to their normal discount. Of course, that return to normal cost some investors a lot of money, but the lower prices could give new investors a chance to buy into growing nations at a more reasonable price.
Here are five picks—all of which are listed on U.S. stock exchanges.

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