Pakistan re-enters Emerging Status after 2008

That’s positive that Pakistan economy is again being classified as Emerging - last time it was classified as Emerging Market was during Musharraf’s term and was downgraded four months into PPP’s Govt in 2008.

Pakistan’s Emerging Market Upgrade Will Attract More Investors
MSCI Pakistan Index will be reclassified to Emerging Markets status, coinciding with the May 2017 Semi-Annual Index Review, according to an MSCI press release on June 14, 2016.

Emerging Market Upgrade:

Pakistan’s Karachi Stock Exchange KSE100 Index has rallied 14% in 2016, making it Asia’s best performing market so far this year in anticipation of the MSCI announcement.

Source: Bloomberg

The upgrade could attract additional $475 million of inflows by the middle of next year as investors rush to buy Pakistani shares, according to analysts quoted by Bloomberg News.

Pakistan was classified as Emerging Market after President Pervez Musharraf took power in Islamabad. It was downgraded to frontier status in December 2008, four months after the former president was forced out by PPP and PMLN politicians.

Loss of investor confidence after Musharraf’s departure triggered a major bear market that wiped out nearly $37 billion of market capitalization at the Karachi Stock Exchange. It led to the imposition of a floor on share prices that caused near total paralysis of market activity for more than three months, according to Bloomberg News.

Pakistan is seeing soaring foreign direct investment (FDI) with improving security and the start of several major energy and infrastructure projects as part of China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), according to the UK’s Financial Times business newspaper.

A New High in FDI:

The year 2015 was a bumper year for foreign investment pouring into Pakistan, says the Financial Times. The country saw 39 greenfield investments adding up to an estimated $18.9 billion last year, according to fDi Markets, an FT data service. This is a big jump from 28 projects for $7.6 billion started in 2014, and marks a new high for greenfield capital investment into the country since fDi began collecting data in 2003.

Pakistan FDI Source: FT.com

The number of projects in 2015 is the largest since Pakistan attracted 57 greenfield projects back in 2005 on President Musharraf’s watch. China is now the top source country for investment into the country, surpassing the second-ranked United Arab Emirates, primarily due to its investments in power.

Top 10 Destinations of Chinese FDI 2012-14. Source: UNESCAP

Major CPEC Projects:

China’s Shanghai Electric, a power generation and electrical equipment manufacturing company, announced plans last year to establish a 1,320 megawatt coal-based power project in Thar desert using domestic coal, scheduled to launch in 2017 or 2018. Traditional energy and power projects made up two-thirds of last year’s total greenfield investment into Pakistan at $12.9 billion with alternative energy bringing in a further $1.8 billion.

CPEC Projects

Among the more notable projects, UAE-based Metal Investment Holding Corporation announced plans to partner with Power China E & M International to invest $5 billion to build three coal-fired plants at Karachi’s Port Qasim. In addition, the transportation sector is also showing promise, with 12 projects totaling $3 billion being announced or initiated last year.

Special Economic Zones:

Beyond the initial phase of power and road projects, there are plans to establish special economic zones in the Corridor where Chinese companies will locate factories. Extensive manufacturing collaboration between the two neighbors will include a wide range of products from cheap toys and textiles to consumer electronics and supersonic fighter planes.

The basic idea of an industrial corridor is to develop a sound industrial base, served by competitive infrastructure as a prerequisite for attracting investments into export oriented industries and manufacturing. Such industries have helped a succession of countries like Indonesia, Japan, Hong Kong, Malaysia, South Korea, Taiwan, China and now even Vietnam rise from low-cost manufacturing base to more advanced, high-end exports. As a country’s labour gets too expensive to be used to produce low-value products, some poorer country takes over and starts the climb to prosperity.

Once completed, the Pak-China industrial corridor with a sound industrial base and competitive infrastructure combined with low labor costs is expected to draw growing FDI from manufacturers in many other countries looking for a low-cost location to build products for exports to rich OECD nations.

Key Challenges:

While the commitment is there on both sides to make the corridor a reality, there are many challenges that need to be overcome. The key ones are maintaining security and political stability, ensuring transparency, good governance and quality of execution. These challenges are not unsurmountable but overcoming them does require serious effort on the part of both sides but particularly on the Pakistani side. Let’s hope Pakistani leaders are up to these challenges.

Summary:

Pak-China economic corridor is a very ambitious effort by the two countries that will lead to greater investment and rapid industrialization of Pakistan. Successful implementation of it will be a game-changer for the people of Pakistan in terms of new economic opportunities leading to higher incomes and significant improvements in the living standards for ordinary Pakistanis. It will be in the best interest of all of them to set their differences aside and work for its successful implementation.

Re: Pakistan re-enters Emerging Status after 2008

Allah rahm farmaiay .
Allah Pakistan ko androoni aur bairooni dushmanon say mahfooz rakhay

Re: Pakistan re-enters Emerging Status after 2008

@RC_Cola So contraction in agriculture sector could mean that share of agriculture sector in GDP is contracting which means that share other sectors like service, infrastructure is growing which is good. And growth is construction does not necessarily mean that it is to benefit foundries it could mean investment in infrastructure which positive indicator as it helps in growth and it could mean private investors have faith in stability of economy and government.

Re: Pakistan re-enters Emerging Status after 2008

During Musharraf era, such accolades were given based on similar stats (KSE = best market for 3 years running), and PMLN always (rightfully) referred to that as a hollow claim since it was based on handouts and loans . And now they are celebrating this so called 'emergence' after getting loans that are far heavier, and China centric. Its not as if the world thinks Pakistan is a better place to invest.

And I cant understand why these reputable sources chose to blatantly misstate the FDI situation in Pakistan. Net FDI reduced by around 50% in the last year. Dont know what made them think it was a 'bumper year' for Pakistan in terms of FDI. I guess they are only looking at inflows (which are almost all from Chinese loans) and not at outflows, which are much more broad based.

Anyway, not sure if our public is sick of these paper victories or not. Based on KSE's performance over the past decade (best market for 4 years out of 10), Pakistan should have been rolling in dough, not doo-doo.

Re: Pakistan re-enters Emerging Status after 2008

Actually CPEC is not a PMLN project . Working on this is continued since decades & last PPP government done big job to do all the preparation keeping it secret like 73-77 nuclear program
This all is blessing of God and this is national achievement so we shall pray to God
Allah rahm farmaiay .
Allah Pakistan ko androoni aur bairooni dushmanon say mahfooz rakhay

Re: Pakistan re-enters Emerging Status after 2008

:hehe:
Keep it secret like swiss bank assets :smiley:

Re: Pakistan re-enters Emerging Status after 2008

About KSE performance and its success, yeah may be to show and brag and marketing purposes only.

Re: Pakistan re-enters Emerging Status after 2008

Financial Times
Pakistan: Unsung Winner in MSCI’s EM decision

An hour ago
While much has already been made of MSCI’s decision not to add China to its emerging markets index, the gatekeepers did end up adding one country to the benchmark index tracked by $1.5tn of global funds: Pakistan.

Alongside its high-profile China deferral, the index provider also announced a decision to reclassify its country-specific MSCI Pakistan Index from frontier markets to emerging markets status, scheduling the official transition to coincide with a semi-annual index review in May 2017.

http://www.ft.com/fastft/files/2016/06/MSCI-updates.png
**

French bank Natixis described Pakistan as the “biggest winner of the 2016 MSCI Market Classification Review,” adding that “by acquiring the EM designation, its firms and index in general may get the capital inflows it wouldn’t otherwise get as a FM. In other words, Pakistan has entered a bigger league.”**

That is welcome news for Pakistan, which is currently dealing with a current account deficit and faces a shortfall of capital needed to help facilitate steady development. MSCI has also published a pro forma list of constituents for its MSCI Provisional Pakistan Indexes, replete with information on each firm’s number of shares and sector:

http://www.ft.com/fastft/files/2016/06/MSCI-Pakistan.png

China wasn’t the only country dealt a losing hand by MSCI’s latest round of reclassifications: Vietnam’s market failed to make the jump from frontier to emerging status. The firm also added Peru – which currently enjoys a position on the emerging markets index – to its watch list for potential demotion to frontier markets.

Yet Nataxis points out that while countries like Vietnam (perhaps including Asia’s other major Communist party-run economy) have their work cut out for them attaining full emerging markets status, “the Pakistan experience shows that nothing is ever permanent and change occurs very rapidly.”

Fast FT

Re: Pakistan re-enters Emerging Status after 2008

I agree that the base has to be widened to have trickled up effect; and on paper accolades based on one major criterion such as KSE do little for lower and middle class segment of the society: In last 25 years (Pakistan was classified as Emerging Market by MSCI from 1994 to 2008) , but in these years the gap between top 20% rich and bottom 20% poor have widened by whopping 7%.

Wealth inequality has a negative relationship with economic growth – currently in Pak; there is widening wealth inequality gap between politically connected and unconnected (market driven); and as I have always contended that in current state politically connected wealth inequality aka cronyism will always have negative association with actual growth in bigger population base countries like Pakistan that have failed to raise human development indexes to breach the less developed mark.

What does that mean? Stock Exchange performance is not an accurate barometer to gauge development of a country that has population of 200 million; and it will further widen the gap between haves and have-nots - favoring the top 20% rich.

As for policies and direction just take the example of withholding tax on services (e.g., 12% have bank accounts) - it will not augur well for largely undocumented economy like Pakistan where the tax net base (est., 1.5% of population) has shrunk by colossal 20% as compared to last year. Mix it with Indirect Taxes bonanza; now we have even further widened actual gap between the rich and poor. Additionally, it will force the already hugely undocumented economy to become even more undocumented as Govt., tries squeezing every ounce from those who were playing sort of fair. - Band aid solution to keep the revenue generation ratio to GDP in line with loan providers' requirements.

You are also right that FDI increase is heavily skewed due to single source and CPEC centric activity; and without investment into sound infrastructure broad based foreign investment cannot be attracted – and it has been proved by both; PPP’s last Government and PMLN’s current government.

Anyone would expect the fundamental issues like above to have been addressed and corrected by the Govt., which has complete power in NA – a stable political Govt., as opposed to PPP which was feebly holding its own and was at mercy of coercive groups like JUIF, MQM etc.,

Nevertheless; this re-entry to EM Group (last was from 1994 to 2008) will be touted and ballyhooed left, right and centre while actual common man issues will remain pretty much the same as they were in 2008 - at minimum several more years to go - unfortunately!

Re: Pakistan re-enters Emerging Status after 2008

lulz](http://www.paklinks.com/gs/usertag.php?do=list&action=hash&hash=lulz) hollow and shallow claims