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MSCI Offers An Outline
MSCI's proposal says that all countries that it does not currently cover would be considered for inclusion in its frontier markets indexes as long as they have a total market capitalization of more than $1 billion and "relative market openness." However, those countries also must have a market that could be the basis for an investable index. MSCI suggests halving its minimum size requirements for companies in its emerging markets indexes to full market capitalization of $93 million and float-adjusted market capitalization of $47 million. The minimum annualized traded value ratio (ATVR) required would be just 2.5% versus 15% for emerging markets. There also must be at least three viable index constituents. And finally, the country must be free of "extreme economic and political strife," which is no small thing. The questions that these requirements raise include how MSCI defines market openness and things like political strife.
From the list of countries meeting these criteria, 12 would be selected for inclusion in MSCI's frontier market indexes. The frontier market family would also comprise countries already covered by the MSCI indexes. Sri Lanka and Venezuela would be included as well as five of the six countries in MSCI's Gulf Cooperation Council index family: Bahrain, Oman, Qatar, United Arab Emirates and Kuwait. Saudi Arabia, the sixth country in the GCC index family, would be excluded because its market is not considered open enough. The end total would be a frontier market index family of 19 countries. Frontier markets would graduate to the MSCI emerging markets indexes if they meet MSCI's requirements for size and investability, do not place undue restrictions on foreign investors and have a stable and reliable operational framework, according to the consultation paper.
In an initial review, MSCI proposed a list of countries that included the likes of Bulgaria, Kenya, Romania, Kazakhstan and Vietnam. The lineup is somewhat different from that of the S&P index family. There are only seven countries for which the two frontier market index families would overlap, a fact that highlights the extreme diversity of the countries falling under the frontier designation and the wide variety of ways that those markets could be measured. However, another eight of the countries suggested for inclusion in the proposed MSCI indexes are also included in S&P's broad emerging markets index, the S&P/IFC Global Composite Index, but not in the S&P/IFC Investable Composite. Cyprus and Estonia are not in the S&P index family but are included in the proposed MSCI indexes. A significantly different list of component countries would likely be a positive way for MSCI to differentiate its indexes from the S&P IFC indexes, which have had more than 10 years to entrench themselves in the marketplace and the minds of investors.
MSCI raises several issues in its consultation paper and asks a lot of questions. Essentially, nothing about the proposed frontier markets indexes seems written in stone. The consultation paper asks what kind of role gross national income (GNI) should play in the selection process. High GNI per capita is associated with higher levels of economic development, and MSCI asks if only countries with higher or lower GNI per capita should be included in the indexes. The consultation paper also asks if a regional perspective is preferable to a single-country perspective and what regions are of greatest interest to investors. It raises another interesting issue when it asks if there would be problems for investors if the composite frontier markets index included large stocks from countries considered too small to have their own country indexes. With regard to tradable narrow indexes, such as a Top 25 index, the consultation paper asks what the typical characteristics and requirements should be and if country concentration is an issue of concern.
Another topic up for debate is whether small-cap stocks should be included in the frontier market indexes and if such coverage is necessary. Adding small-caps would increase the proposed number of components from 132 to 374, and would increase the index's market capitalization from $144 billion to $181 billion. Coverage of the market would jump from 79% to 98%.
The desired end result suggested by the consultation paper is a frontier markets index family that finds an optimum balance between investability and completeness of coverage, serves as a useful benchmark for long-term investors, and is fully compatible with the methodology of the MSCI Global Investable Market Indices.
More To Come...
Although S&P is firmly positioned as the leader in this area if only by virtue of the fact that it is the only major index provider currently in the frontier markets space, increasing investor awareness and interest means there is an opportunity for index providers looking to expand their coverage. MSCI has clearly taken several steps down the path to creating its own set of indexes, and it looks like it will probably be the next index provider to enter the space. What will be interesting to watch in the next few years is the debate that will inevitably arise over whether indexing makes sense in frontier markets, the way increased investor interest will affect the performance and correlations of the hottest frontier markets, and the inevitable investable products that will no doubt sprout in the marketplace once investor enthusiasm hits a certain critical point.
| Frontier Markets: MSCI's Suggested List Versus S&P's Covered Markets |
| Country |
MSCI |
S&P |
| Bahrain |
X |
* |
| Bangladesh |
|
X |
| Botswana |
|
X |
| Bulgaria |
X |
X |
| Cote d'Ivoire |
|
X |
| Croatia |
X |
X |
| Cyprus |
X |
|
| Ecuador |
|
X |
| Estonia |
X |
|
| Estonia |
|
X |
| Ghana |
|
X |
| Jamaica |
|
X |
| Kazakhstan |
X |
X(1) |
| Kenya |
X |
X |
| Kuwait |
X |
* |
| Latvia |
|
X |
| Lebanon |
|
X |
| Lithuania |
X |
X |
| Mauritius |
|
X |
| Namibia |
|
X |
| Nigeria |
X |
* |
| Oman |
X |
* |
| Panama |
|
X (1) |
| Qatar |
X |
* |
| Romania |
X |
X |
| Slovakia |
|
X |
| Slovenia |
X |
X |
| Sri Lanka |
X |
* |
| Tobago & Trinidad |
|
X |
| Tunisia |
|
X |
| United Arab Emirates |
X |
* |
| Ukraine |
X |
X |
| Venezuela |
X |
* |
| Vietnam |
X |
X |
*Included in S&P's emerging markets indexes.
(1)Will be added to the S&P frontier markets indexes as of December 1.
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