Glowing reviews for Pak Economy...

Pak is Merryl Lynch’s favorite Asian Economy:)
They mention some of the MAJOR advatages of the Pak economy, such as 100 percent ownership by foreign investors. They mention political instibility, but the word of a PPP military coalition has given serious confidence in the furture political order!
Daily trading on KSE values about 500 million, compared to 300 million in Vietnam, another fast developing asian market…

Investor Interest in Pakistani Stocks Up


Karachi, Pakistan’s most populous city, is abuzz with hard hats and traffic jams, reflecting the South Asian nation’s increased economic activity and its emergence as a hot spot for foreign stock investors.

“You can’t go a couple of miles without seeing some construction,” said DWS Scudder managing director of emerging markets Terrence Gray, fresh from a visit to Karachi and the capital city Islamabad last week. “They are tearing up roads all over the cities and trying to really make a big drive in improving infrastructure.”

Gray, who helps manage $2 billion in emerging market stocks at DWS Scudder, the U.S.-based unit of Deutsche Bank (nyse: DB - news - people )'s Asset Management division, was in the South Asian nation to see for himself what others are saying: Pakistan offers good returns and cheap valuations.

Better still, it is not entirely on investors’ radar screens, potentially rewarding the trailblazers venturing into the so-called frontier market. Pakistan is also the only country in Asia where foreigners can own 100 percent of any asset in any sector, according to Merrill Lynch (nyse: MER - news - people ).

“The government is fairly hands-off,” said New York -based Ryan Floyd, a South Asian and sub-Saharan African stock trader with brokerage Auerbach Grayson Co. “It’s very investor-friendly.”

From its delicate geo-political position and the threat of terrorism to its own internal political disputes and democratic shortcomings, political tensions frame any discussions about investing in Pakistan.

Politics are certainly a concern, but investors in Pakistani stocks say the domestic story is too compelling to ignore. Pakistani stocks have added 24 percent in dollar terms so far this year on the MSCI Barra index, second only to Malaysia among emerging Asian stocks. Last year, it lost 1.6 percent on the MSCI, which opened up for more value after a spectacular 57 percent return in 2005.

Pakistan is Merrill’s favorite market in Asia.

“We like to tell people Pakistan is the same story as Vietnam, for a third the price and five times the liquidity,” the investment bank said in a report published Thursday. “The reason Pakistan is so cheap is because of its perceived risk. In our view, that risk is about to diminish a lot.”

The investment bank foresees a political alliance between rivals President Gen. Pervez Musharraf and opposition leader and former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, and even normalizing relations between Pakistan and neighboring rival India.

The bottom line for Pakistani politics is “Musharraf will stay in power because the elite (military, business community) like him,” Merrill said.

Valuations are cheap compared with other emerging markets, with major companies having forward price-to-earnings ratios of 9 or 10, compared with an average ratio elsewhere in developing markets of 12 to 13.

Its relatively liquid market should also appeal to those veering off the beaten track: daily trading volume on the Karachi stock exchange averages $400 million to $500 million. By comparison, the Vietnamese stock exchange trades about $300 million a day. Nigeria, another so-called frontier market, trades between $40 million to $50 million daily.

The Karachi bourse’s market capitalization hovers around $55 billion, compared to about $17 billion four years ago.

Many investors look at Pakistan as a place for India-style growth at much cheaper valuations, said Auerbach Grayson’s Floyd.

Floyd visited Pakistan in November and struck up conversation with shopkeepers in major Pakistani cities. He heard that Pakistanis are spending more and switching to more expensive brands, with rising incomes supported by robust economic growth.

According to the Asian Development Bank, Pakistan’s gross domestic product growth slowed to 6.6 percent in 2006 from an average of 8 percent in the previous two years. The ADB forecasts growth of 6.5 percent to 7 percent in 2007 and 2008.

Demand in some sectors is stretching supply. Cars, particularly, can be hard to get. Many dealerships in major cities have waiting lists, and it can take one to three months to get a car, Floyd said.

Pakistan’s young population is also hankering for housing and cell phones.

Alongside portfolio inflows, foreign direct investment is also picking up.

Giant multinationals such as Egypt’s telecommunications company Orascom , global bank Standard Chartered and China’s wireless provider China Mobile (nyse: CHL - news - people ) have made acquisitions or set up units in Pakistan recently.

In terms of sectors, financials - banking and insurance, mainly - are expected to shine. Demand for loans is growing at more than 20 percent per year and consumer loans-to-GDP ratio is just 4 percent, providing plenty of room to grow, the lowest in Asia, Merrill said.

Pakistan is also the most under-penetrated consumer credit market in Asia, Merrill said.

DWS Scudder’s Gray holds shares of Muslim Commercial Bank (other-otc: CBDP.PK - news - people ), which is also Merrill’s pick among Pakistani banks. MCB is expanding into consumer lending, and it has one of the most extensive branch networks in the country.

Auerbach Grayson’s Floyd highlighted Bank of Punjab on liquidity and the bank’s planned branch expansion towards the country’s northern hinterlands.

Other firms on Merrill’s list of noteworthy Pakistani companies include Pakistan Oilfields, cement companies such as D.G. Khan Cement, and fertilizer maker Fauji Fertilizer bin Qasim.

Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed


http://www.forbes.com/feeds/ap/2007/...ap3632947.html

Re: Glowing reviews for Pak Economy...

Fanstastic!!! You just wonder how much our economy can improve if we ever get political stability.

Re: Glowing reviews for Pak Economy...

Right on!

Re: Glowing reviews for Pak Economy...

Good stuff!

Re: Glowing reviews for Pak Economy...

[quote]
"You can't go a couple of miles without seeing some construction," said DWS Scudder managing director of emerging markets Terrence Gray, fresh from a visit to Karachi and the capital city Islamabad last week. "They are tearing up roads all over the cities and trying to really make a big drive in improving infrastructure."
[/quote]

Yup, that is the case in many parts of Pakistan now, not just Karachi. Unprecedented economic and infrastructural development initiated by this government, as never before seen in our history.

Re: Glowing reviews for Pak Economy...

Best govt ever.

Re: Glowing reviews for Pak Economy...

Merrill lynch is run by military and ISI and can not be trusted :D

PS: kinda quiet from the usual suspects, but get ready for ppl disputing ML's views soon, or provide half baked theories about reasons of economic progress.

Re: Glowing reviews for Pak Economy…

per capita income finally gets going

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2007\04\23\story_23-4-2007_pg7_17
The PM said that record growth would be achieved this year with per capita income approaching $950. He said that next year’s per capita income was expected to reach $1,000, finally making the country a middle-income nation. He said bumper crops were expected and rural areas would be developed at a faster rate.

good to hear

Re: Glowing reviews for Pak Economy...

Yaar, I want to hear some connection to ISI/Government planted media now!

Re: Glowing reviews for Pak Economy…

Ah yes bumper crop is also because of 911, so would losers think along those lines. Given that Pak is an Agri based economy its good news, droughts are disasters for such economies.

Success has many fathers failure is an orphan.

Re: Glowing reviews for Pak Economy...

[QUOTE]
Ah yes bumper crop is also because of 911, so would losers think along those lines.
[/QUOTE]

[QUOTE]

Yaar, I want to hear some connection to ISI/Government planted media now!

[/QUOTE]

cant understand either of you. this has very little to do with 911 or isi. this is a very modest improvemnt in the shift of the pak economy towards a high goal. but a welcome improvement it is.

Re: Glowing reviews for Pak Economy...

[quote]
The Karachi bourse's market capitalization hovers around $55 billion, compared to about $17 billion four years ago.
[/quote]

Just look at that figure. That is just one example of the spectacular success of this government (Musharraf's) economic policies that no previous government even got close to.

Re: Glowing reviews for Pak Economy…

Off course bumper crops are due to 9/11. Don’t we all know that all news of progress in Pakistan has 9/11 connections? All those American bombs and going after Talibans and their supporters, along with Pakistan government doing same, started many walking fertiliser factories in tribal areas and other parts of Pakistan. People in tribal areas and other parts of Pakistan started producing huge quantity of cheep natural fertilizer. Cause of huge crops in Pakistan is availability of cheep and high quality natural fertilizer produced by these Taliban and their supporters. Hence this huge crops is due to Taliban and has 9/11 connection. :slight_smile:

Obviously, it is nothing to do with stimulation of market forces. Government policy, resulting in increased per capita income that resulted in increased demand, along with increasing farms output prices to increase incentives to farmers, resulted in multi-fold increase in farms output over last few years, are just rubbish and BS conclusions. 9/11 and natural fertilizer produced by Taliban is real cause, thus 9/11 Zindabad. :hoonh:

Re: Glowing reviews for Pak Economy...

I believe KSE market capitalisation was 5.7 billion dollars (actually around 286 billion rupees) when President Musharraf came to power in 1999. It has come a long way with market capitalisation now over 55 billion dollars. KSE 100-share index was around 1200 in 1999, now it is over 12000 in 2007.

Re: Glowing reviews for Pak Economy…

u mean because of phainti provided by Uncle Sam, the taleban types and their supporters got so scared that they soiled their pants all the time and thus providing more than usual amount of fertilizer and thus the crop production increased?

kewl man.. I knew there was a connection

Re: Glowing reviews for Pak Economy…

:chai: Hmmm .. Fraudia Bhai … its seems so, isn’t this true? I am sure that many on this forum would confirm what I wrote. It is all those fertilizer that caused bumper crops in Pakistan, all to do with Taliban and 9/11. :blush:
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Re: Glowing reviews for Pak Economy...

The market capitalisation of Bombay Stock Exchange was $730 billion in Oct 2006.

The market capitalisation of Karachi Stock Exchange was $52 billion early this year.

That's a ratio of 14:1.

The population ratio between India and Pakistan is 6.5 : 1

The per capita GDP in Pakistan was $2600 in 2006.

In India it was $3700 in 2006.

Inflation in Pakistan in 2006 was a whopping 7.9%

In India it was 5.3% in 2006.

There goes your outstanding economic performance.

Re: Glowing reviews for Pak Economy...

THis is not an Ind-Pak thread...

It is not a race. We congradulate India on her success, we are forging our own path.

IMF places pak PPP/PC at $3004 for 2006/7. India at c. $3600?

In real terms, Pak is marginally higher. $950 plays $850 something like that.

Re: Glowing reviews for Pak Economy…

No doubt money has flowed into Pakistan since 2001, let’s hope the ‘War on Terror’ continues for a long, long time! :k:

Re: Glowing reviews for Pak Economy…

These days they are saying that Pakistan may not need the US any longer… As China develops, and Pakistan is able to integrate its economy with those of its neighbors though the IPI pipeline and Gawadar port, America support will become less of a liability…