Distress to impress
Distressed selling - an urgent sale of assets due to negative market
conditions - will ironically ensure that 2009 is a
positive year for investors in the GCC and around the world, said senior executives
at United States investment bank Morgan Stanley, which manages assets worth
billions of dollars in the Gulf...
The region, which is viewed by international investors as a destination for
portfolio diversification, can attract additional funds if it improves its
transparency records, said James Dilworth, Managing Director of investment
management unit at Morgan Stanley.
Revival of the financial markets, especially the credit market, possible by the
end of the year, will be the first sign of recovery of the global economy, he
said.
Outlining a range of "interesting investment opportunities" during
the prevailing distressed times; he said leveraged loans, high yield debts and
convertible bonds will provide ideal space for investment in 2009.
Unleveraged returns from the leveraged loan markets could be
as high as 20 per cent on investments, Dilworth said.
Big institutional investors and "sophisticated" investors have either
returned to the markets or will return in a near future as "liability
benchmarks need to be met" he said.
"Sophisticated investors are picking up distressed assets being sold.
Furthermore, institutional investors cannot remain off the market for long
because they have commitments to meet," Dilworth said.
"The cost of keeping the assets is high at the moment and individual
companies would like to dispose them and raise capital. When investors try to
get out of private investments, it provides an opportunity for asset
buyers," Dilworth said citing the reason behind his optimism. "Fixed
income space has a lot of investment space," he added.
Economic activity in 2009 will also emerge out of a "forced allocation
Change", Morgan Stanley officials said.
"Investors have to rebalance their portfolio and will have to reallocate
their funds. For an example, they may extract money from private equity and
real estate and put it into public equity," said Michael Samaha, managing
director at Morgan Stanley's DIFC branch.
Private equity remains a "huge opportunity" Morgan Stanley officials
said.
"It is not that investment opportunities will be any less interesting.
People who have bought large funds are looking to move out and this is an
investment opportunity. There is a huge amount of money coming into private
equity space," Samaha said.
"This year will also be a good for launch of private equity fund
considering valuations of companies are much more balanced and transparent
today," he said.
Both outflow and inflow of funds in from the GCC in broader terms has
diminished, Morgan Stanley officials said.
"With the price of oil coming down the flow may be hampered. However, it
will not in levels comparable to oil," Samaha said, expanding on Morgan
Stanley's expectations on outflow of funds from the GCC.
"International investors look to the region to diversify their portfolios."But
the GCC economies need to improve their track records of transparency and
corporate governance," Samaha said.
The much talked about 'common market' will not on itself usher transparency in
the region but GCC states will have to make individual efforts, Samaha added.
There is a tendency among GCC sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) to focus on
investments within the region they added but may Change their strategies in
future, Morgan Stanley officials said.
'Alternative' segments comprising private equity, hedge funds, real estate and
infrastructure of investment comprise as high as 20 per cent of a typical GCC
SWF, Samaha said.
Morgan Stanley, which had to lay off staff in the wake of the economic
downturn, will be launching five funds in 2009 that specialise in private
equity, real estate, credit and secondary markets, Dilworth said.
Source: Business 24-7