There are multiple drivers for EM companies today. These include innovation, reshoring and the potential of less-noticed Chinese companies to stand out.
Innovation will increasingly be an important ingredient for EM corporate profits. The share of patents originating in EM countries has been steadily rising over time, which we believe is a leading indicator for future innovation. Take artificial intelligence (AI) for example. NVIDIA in the US has grabbed the headlines, but the company’s role in the AI revolution is widely known. On the other hand, EM companies play an important role in AI innovation that investors are much less familiar with, so there is upside potential waiting to be discovered.
For example, Asia Vital Components is a Taiwan-based manufacturer of heat-management systems for computers. Since the machines that run AI will use increasingly advanced semiconductors, chips will require electrons that are ever more densely packed. That means more heat is generated and overheating is a problematic, design-limiting constraint. Asia Vital’s products help address this issue with systems that can keep computers cool even at higher levels of heat generation. Many other suppliers of critical components will be needed for the AI revolution. Companies like these are what we call a “back door” to AI. Many of these manufacturers are based in EM countries and offer much more attractive valuations than some of the developed-world’s AI darlings.
Reshoring is also reshaping the role of EM countries and companies in the global economy. Since China’s ascension to the World Trade Organization in 2001, China became the factory to the world. However, given rising labor costs in China and supply chain risks, multinational companies are increasingly diversifying their manufacturing footprint. This is known as the “China + 1” strategy.
Key beneficiaries include emerging countries such as Mexico, Vietnam and Bangladesh. But the big question is India. Now the most populous nation in the world, India boasts an abundant low-cost labor pool. However, in the past, India never emerged as a manufacturing leader due to poor infrastructure and red tape. The government is proactively addressing these issues and multinationals are starting to shift production to India. Apple, for example, is building an AirPods factory in India, and has plans to continue ramping up production there in the future.
Some investors worry about the slowing Chinese economy, which comprises 25% of the EM benchmark. Yet even in a more challenged environment, we believe there are many attractive opportunities to be found in China. The MSCI EM index includes over 700 Chinese companies. This diversity is an often-overlooked strength of EM broadly and of China in particular.
New innovative companies are emerging, too. PDD Holdings, a rising Chinese online shopping company, for example, has been taking significant market share from the Alibaba Group. Many other new companies can be found below the radar screen of international investors. And some of China’s state-owned enterprises are becoming much more focused on return on capital and shareholder returns, which we believe could also drive upside surprises.