BLBG:Commodities to Rally on âCheap Money,â Renaissance Assetâs Monovski Says
Commodities may rally as central banks boost money supply further and cut interest rates to combat slowing economic growth, according to Renaissance Asset Managers, a unit of Moscow-based Renaissance Group.
âMoney will continue to be plentiful and free, and that will continue to underwrite a commodity cycle,â said Chief Investment Officer Plamen Monovski, who oversees about $2.2 billion and formerly co-managed as much as $9 billion at BlackRock Inc. (BLK), the worldâs biggest asset manager.
Central banks are undertaking the broadest reduction in borrowing costs since 2009 to avert a global slump stemming from Europeâs sovereign-debt turmoil. The U.S., the U.K. and nine other nations, along with the European Central Bank, have bolstered monetary stimulus in the past three months. While commodities have rallied this year, global equities have dropped.
Governments are âyet again going to flood the world with cheap money and make commodities more valuable,â said London- based Monovski in an interview in Singapore yesterday. âWeâre going to see the same effect of cheap money spilling into commodities and emerging markets.â
The Federal Reserve, the ECB and central banks of Canada, Switzerland, Japan and the U.K. on Nov. 30 made it cheaper for banks to borrow dollars (DXY) in emergencies. In China, the central bank said the same day that banksâ reserve requirements will fall 50 basis points in the first reduction since 2008.
Goldmanâs Outlook
China, the worldâs largest user of base metals and energy, may reduce interest rates next year as inflation eases, according to Song Yu, a Beijing-based economist for Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Goldman also expects commodities to rally in 2012 as the global economy avoids recession, analysts led by London-based Jeffrey Currie said in a report yesterday.
Renaissance invests in âplaces with commodities woven into the economy,â said Bulgarian-born Monovski, whoâs invested in emerging markets for 15 years. He gave Africa and Russia as examples and said investments include equities and debt holdings.
Commodities had their worst quarter since 2008 in the three months to Sept. 30 on concern that Europeâs debt crisis was spreading. The Standard & Poorâs GSCI Spot Index of 24 raw materials has risen 11 percent since then as central banks took steps to ease pressures on financial markets.
Commodity Rally
In 2009, commodities surged 50 percent for their best annual run since at least 1971 as governments around the world ramped up stimulus spending to lift their economies out of the worst recession since World War II. This year, the S&P GSCI Spot Index has rallied 3.9 percent, while global stocks as tracked by the MSCI All-Country World Index have declined 8.8 percent.
Europeâs debt crisis has stoked concern that the region may slip into recession, endangering the global expansion. There is a 50 percent chance of recessions in the U.S., the U.K. and euro zone economies in the next 12 months, Nouriel Roubini, co- founder of Roubini Global Economics LLC, said in October.
The turmoil in Europe wonât push the global economy into recession because liquidity provided by central banks is fueling underlying demand, Franklin Templeton Investmentsâ Mark Mobius said last month. Governments âcontinue to pump money into the system and interest rates are low,â said Mobius, who oversees more than $40 billion in assets as executive chairman of Templeton Emerging Markets Group.
Renaissance is targeting investments in Africa, the worldâs poorest continent, said Monovski. âItâs huge, itâs undiscovered, itâs cyclically depressed, it has commodity endowments, itâs undergoing governance change.â
The International Monetary Fund estimates sub-Saharan Africa may grow 5.75 percent in 2012. Still, the region will not be shielded from another global slowdown if the outlook in developed economies worsens, the IMF said on Oct. 19.
Parent Renaissance Group plans to invest âseveral more billionsâ in Africa, Chief Executive Officer Stephen Jennings said in May. The group includes Renaissance Capital, a brokerage partly owned by billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov.
To contact the reporter on this story: Glenys Sim in Singapore at gsim4@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: James Poole at jpoole4@bloomberg.net