THE SUCCESS OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND MARKETS
1
April 2015
Research Institute
Thought leadership from Credit Suisse Research
and the world's foremost experts
The success of
small countries
and markets
THE SUCCESS OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND MARKETS
2
Contents
Introduction
05
Canaries in the coal mine
06
CS Country Strength Index
08
Small countries as lead indicators
11
Small countries and markets
11
Small outperforms large
14
Does volatility matter?
15
Companies in small developed
countries
20
Imprint / Disclaimer
For more information, please contact:
Richard Kersley, Head of Global Securities
Products and Themes, Credit Suisse
Investment Banking,
[email protected]
Michael O’Sullivan, Chief Investment
Officer, UK & EMEA, Credit Suisse
Private Banking & Wealth Management,
michael.o’
[email protected]
COVER PHOTO: ISTOCKPHOTO.COM/ELXENEIZE PHOTO: ISTOCKPHOTO.COM/SCANRAIL
03
THE SUCCESS OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND MARKETS
3
Introduction
In August 2014, we launched our “Success of Small Countries Report.”
At the time, much of the focus in the media was on Scotland ahead of
its referendum on independence from the United Kingdom. In the report, we found that small developed states and separate customs territories (World Trade Organization definition) were economically more
successful than their larger peers and that, importantly, they tended to
be more globalized. Further, we found that they typically are the leaders
in putting “intangible infrastructure” factors like education, technology
and healthcare to work in driving growth. We created a “CS Country
Strength Index” and found that six of the top ten countries by “strength”
are small ones.
Since then, the small country narrative has grown, not simply in
terms of Greece’s economic travails, but more pertinently in the way
that small states have clearly become the lead indicators of new
trends in the world economy. Take Switzerland and Denmark, for
example, where dramatic and new monetary policy actions have emphasized the way in which small developed countries need to react to
buffer financial flows.
More than ever before, small countries are acutely exposed to the
economic and political challenges of a changing global environment.
Consider the ways in which New Zealand and Norway are registering
the side effects of slower growth in China, the social costs of austerity evident in Ireland and Portugal or the difficulty that central banks in
the Nordic region have in containing the side effects of imported
deflation, and it is clear that small countries are the dashboard on
which many of the world’s imbalances first become evident.
Small countries provide an indication of the future for large countries, and a test bed as to what works and what does not. One innovation in this report is to measure the way in which small countries
lead larger ones in terms of economic performance. Within Europe,
we find that for fiscal and debt-related indicators, small countries
appear to be “canaries in the coal mine.” Singapore, it seems, also
plays this role on a global basis.
Finally, we take the novel approach of tying small countries' macro
performance to the performance of their capital markets. Comparing
small to large company investments is common in markets, but we
find relatively little emphasis on small versus large countries from an
investment perspective. Interestingly, in the long term, small developed country equity markets have outperformed large country ones.
The same is true, though less emphatically so, for small developed
country bond markets. We also examine the risk properties and sector composition of small country stock markets. Our ultimate aim here
is to construct a portfolio of companies that are based in small developed open economies. We will publish the results of this in related
investment publications.
Stefano Natella
Global Head of Equity Research, Investment Banking
Michael O'Sullivan
Chief Investment Officer for the UK & EMEA, Private Banking &
Wealth Management
THE SUCCESS OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND MARKETS
4
Figure 1
MSCI World and episodes of small developed country out/underperformance
Source: Datastream, Credit Suisse
Total Return Index (USD)
9000
8000
7000
6000
5000
4000
3000
2000
1000
0
Jan-90
Jan-94
World
Sweden
Jan-98
H.6$5
Jan-02
Singapore
Jan-06
Ireland
Jan-10
Iceland
Portugal
Jan-14
Switzerland
Figure 2
World GDP and episodes of small developed country out/underperformance
Source: Datastream, National sources, Oxford Economics, Credit Suisse
25000
GDP, constant prices (USD billion)
Q1 1990=100
World GDP
Sweden
20000
Hong Kong6$5
Singapore
15000
Ireland
Iceland
10000
Portugal
5000
Q1 1990
Switzerland
Q1 1994
Q1 1998
Q1 2002
Q1 2006
Q1 2010
Q1 2014
THE SUCCESS OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND MARKETS
5
Canaries in the coal
mine
Small countries have been in the vanguard of the rise of globalization and, at a more detailed level, they can be seen as the test beds
of globalization – many of them have to deal with emerging problems such as negative interest rates, tensions caused by immigration and austerity – ahead of larger countries. In this way, they are
“canaries in the coal mine” of the world economy.
The wave of globalization that began with the fall of communism has been marked by the rise of small countries. Many
of them have enjoyed “Tiger” like bursts of growth and prosperity, and some of some them have equally met jarring corrections and, more recently, recoveries. GDP growth and slow
market performance (Figures 1 and 2) show wider variations
relative to the global trend. As we found in our original report,
small developed countries are in the vanguard of globalization.
In order to better outline our results, we establish three country
groupings – small developed “blue chip” countries, large developed countries and small developing countries 1 . Small developed countries lead the world in terms of how open their economies are (Figure 3) and relatedly how globalized they are
(Figure 4). We also show that small developed countries have
lower debt-to-GDP ratios and inflation rates than larger countries (Figures 5 and 6).
We have recomputed our Globalization Index by drawing together data on three component parts – economic, social and
technological2. Table 1 shows that small countries like Singa-
pore, Hong Kong SAR (Special Administrative Region) and
Switzerland lead the globalization rankings. According to our
analysis, in 2000, 76% of the top 25 most globalized countries
were “small,” and this has now risen to 84%. At the same
time, there are now fewer small countries in the bottom 25
globalized countries.
There is a very clear clustering of small “entrepot” economies at the top of the globalization league table – a trend that
also highlights how vulnerable their economies are to financial,
labor and trade flows. Further, in aggregate, small developed
countries outrank larger and medium ones when we dissect
the component parts of the globalization rankings (Figure 7).
Figure 3
Small developed economies are more open than
larger ones (trade as % of GDP)
Source: World Bank, Credit Suisse
% GDP
180
160
1
Large developed – Australia, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Spain, UK and
USA; small developed – Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Norway,
Portugal, Iceland, Ireland, Sweden and Switzerland; small developing –
Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Israel, Singapore, Slovakia, Qatar, UAE,
Latvia and Croatia. For the sake of comparison we have also included Hong
Kong, which is a Special Administrative Region of the People’s Republic of
China.
2
Economic globalization: trade openness (% of GDP), FDI (% of GDP), FPI
(% of GDP); social globalization: cell phone subscription (per 100 people),
telecom lines (per 100 people), remittances (inward and outward, % of
GDP), corporate openness included factors like the ease of doing business
rank (by World Bank), import delays (in days), mean tariff rates (in %), taxes
on trade (% of government revenue); technological globalization: internet
users (per 100 people), secure servers (per million people)..
140
120
100
80
60
40
20
1990
1992
1994
1996
Small countries (blue chips)
1998
2000
2002
2004
Large countries (developed)
2006
2008
2010
2012
Small countries (developing)
THE SUCCESS OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND MARKETS
6
Table 1
Figure 4
Small countries dominate CS Globalization
Index rankings
Small developed countries have a higher average
ranking according to the CS Globalization index
Source:
World Bank, Credit Suisse
Source:
Credit Suisse
Source: Credit Suisse
Country
Size
Score
Luxembourg
S
0.97
Singapore
S
0.89
Switzerland
S
0.87
Hong Kong SAR
S
0.84
Ireland
S
0.82
Belgium
M
0.81
Hungary
S
0.81
Iceland
S
0.81
Netherlands
M
0.80
Malta
S
0.80
Index
0.85
0.80
0.75
0.70
0.65
0.60
0.55
2000
CS Country Strength Index
Similarly, in our 2014 report, we computed a “CS Country
Strength Index,” the object of which is to rank countries on the
basis of the quality of their institutions and intangible infrastructure (we developed this theme in a previous Credit Suisse
Research Institute report, “Intangible Infrastructure – The key
to growth,” published 8 December 2008, and we define intangible infrastructure as “the set of factors that develop human
capability and permit the easy and efficient growth of business
activity”), their aptness to thrive in a globalized world, their
ability to produce sustainable and lower volatility macroeconomic output and their level of human development. These
many angles are closely related and, in most cases, the causality between them is hard to unravel. Our sense is that by
looking at social and institutional aspects of states as well as
economic ones, we achieve a more well-rounded view of a
state and in particular its ability to withstand stress.
2002
2004
Small countries (blue chips)
2006
2008
Large countries (developed)
2010
2012
Small countries (developing)
Figure 5
Debt to GDP elevated for large countries (including
Japan) but not as much for smaller countries
Source: World Bank, Credit Suisse
% GDP
100
90
80
70
60
50
In detail, the factors we consider are as follows:
The UN Human Development Indicator.
The Credit Suisse Intangible Infrastructure Index.
The Credit Suisse Globalization Index.
Macroeconomic volatility.3
Governance.4
Table 2 shows that small developed countries continue to
dominate, with seven small developed countries (Switzerland,
Denmark, Hong Kong SAR, Singapore, Norway, Finland and
Ireland) in the top ten together with Australia, the UK and the
Netherlands. Since our last review, the main changes are that
Singapore has dropped three places, Australia has risen three
places, and Finland has jumped to number nine.
40
30
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
Small countries (blue chips)
Large countries (developed)
Small countries (developing)
Figure 6
Inflation is less problematic in small developed
countries
Source: Datastream, Credit Suisse
Index
260
240
220
200
180
160
140
120
3
Here we have taken two variables – standard deviation of GDP growth
rates and inflation, taken from the World Bank database, from 1960 onward.
4
The average of Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index
Center for Systemic Peace’s State Fragility Index.
100
1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Small countries (blue chips)
Large countries (developed)
Small countries (developing, ex-Bulgaria)
THE SUCCESS OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND MARKETS
Table 2
Figure 7
Small countries dominate the CS Country
Strength Index
Sub-components of Globalization Index: Small
countries have performed well on all sub-indices
Source:
World Bank, Credit Suisse
Source:
Credit Suisse
Source: Credit Suisse
Country
Size
Country Strength Index
Switzerland
S
0.87
Australia
M
0.85
Denmark
S
0.83
Hong Kong SAR
S
0.83
Netherlands
M
0.83
United Kingdom
L
0.82
Singapore
S
0.82
Norway
S
0.82
Finland
S
0.80
Ireland
S
0.80
Belgium
M
0.79
New Zealand
S
0.79
Austria
S
0.79
Israel
S
0.79
Iceland
S
0.79
Luxembourg
S
0.78
Sweden
S
0.78
Korea, Rep.
L
0.77
Canada
L
0.76
France
L
0.76
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0.60
0.55
0.50
0.45
0.40
0.35
Economic globalization
Large
Social globalization
Medium
Technological
Globalization
Final score
Small
7
THE SUCCESS OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND MARKETS
8
Figure 8
Lead indicators heat map
Source: Credit Suisse
Small countries as lead indicators
Having underlined that small countries are at the fore of this
wave of globalization and in many cases are among the first to
experience emerging trends in the global economy, we investigate the view that they are lead indicators of trends in larger
countries. Specifically, we examine whether small countries
can tell us something in advance about fiscal, monetary and
balance of payment trends in large countries.
To illustrate this, we create a heat-map based on macro indicators 5 , for 23 countries (eight large and 15 small), see
Figure 8. The idea of the heat map is that it flashes green
where indicators are rising above their average levels (based
on a measure called a Z score) 6. For each macro variable, we
measure the consistency of small countries as lead indicators
of a change in behavior, and then examine the large country
signals to see if they follow small countries. For such variables,
we then see which small countries have been the best leading
5
Government expenditure (% of GDP), structural fiscal deficit (% of GDP),
non-performing loans (% of total loans), bank capital to assets ratio (%),
bank liquid assets to total ratio (%), foreign direct investment (% of GDP),
foreign portfolio investment (% of GDP), equity market capitalization (% of
GDP), foreign exchange reserves (% of GDP). With the exception of household debt and FX reserves, the World Bank Development Indicators database is used as a source for all variables.
6
We color code the table and assume a signal when a cell is colored. Cells
are colored red when the variable is at –0.5 or more standard deviations
away from the mean. Cells are colored green when the variable is more than
0.5 standard deviations away from the mean. For each year (e.g. 1995), we
count the number of red/green signals for the small countries. If the number
of signals for any variable is greater than 25% for the small country sample
(more than five countries), we consider it to be a leading indicator. Next we
see if, in the next period, more than three (out of eight) large countries have
shown the same trend in signal (red following red, green following green). If
so, we assume that the small country sample has served as a lead indicator
for the large countries. Otherwise, the signal is denoted as false. We consider only those variables as significant, where the number of right signals is
more than wrong ones.
indicators of activity in larger countries. We then pick the corresponding large countries for which these small countries
have acted as “canaries in the coal mine.”
Our results show that, largely in a European context, a
range of small countries – Austria and Denmark for example,
appear to act as “canaries” for larger countries when we consider trade, government spending, non-performing loans and
fiscal balance (Figure 9 helps to illustrate this). Outside
Europe, Singapore shows a close leading relationship with
fiscal trends in the USA.
We think two effects might help explain why small countries
appear to act as leading indicators for trends in larger ones.
The first may come from anticipation. Small countries open to
trade are likely to depend heavily on the economic policies of
their larger trading partners. Accordingly, they might embark
earlier on fiscal stimulus or austerity programs than their larger
partners to allow for the effects of fiscal pass-through to run
into the economy, before larger countries make such moves.
For example, Singapore's fiscal policy has tended to follow the
changes in US fiscal numbers, becoming more expansive
some years prior to US fiscal expansion episodes, possibly to
create excess capacity well in advance of incoming US external demand.
Second, we flag an integration effect that causes small
countries in closely knit trade or fiscal networks to show signs
of unusual movements, owing to their smaller share in the
network, before these impact larger members. For example,
non-performing loans in small countries rose faster in the Eurozone before a similar effect was seen in larger countries.
THE SUCCESS OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND MARKETS
Figure 9
Small countries appear to lead large ones on fiscal outlook
Source: World Bank Development Indicators, Credit Suisse
Z-scores
1.5
1
0.5
Improving
fiscal balance
0
-0.5
-1
Fiscal balances in countries
of Northern and Continental
Europe had begun to
deteriorate from 2007
onwards, about two years
before their onset in larger
European countries
-1.5
-2
-2.5
1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Small country
PHOTO:ISTOCKPHOTO.COM/DANIELVFUNG
Large country
9
THE SUCCESS OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND MARKETS 10
THE SUCCESS OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND MARKETS 10
PHOTO:ISTOCKPHOTO.COM/ESEBENE
THE SUCCESS OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND MARKETS
11
Small countries and
markets
In this and our previous publication on the “success of small countries,” we have looked at the economic strengths of small countries.
We now examine whether this has carried over to their stock and
bond markets. In the long run, we find impressive performance from
small developed country stock markets.
In February of this year, we published our annual Credit Suisse
Investment Returns Yearbook 2015, which contains 115 years
of stock and bond market data across 23 countries. One of
the features of the larger Sourcebook that accompanies the
Yearbook is a focus on investment styles – principally the
distinctions between large and small capitalization stocks, value
versus growth, and cyclical versus defensive sectors. Yet one
approach that does not appear to be prominent in the literature
is to compare financial asset returns for large and small countries.
Given our conviction that small countries are very much at
the fore of globalization, we examine this in some detail. We
take three groups of countries – large developed (Australia,
France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Spain, UK and USA), small
developed (Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Ireland, Netherlands, Norway and Sweden) and small developing (Estonia,
Hungary, UAE, Qatar, Slovakia, Iceland, Israel, Croatia, Latvia,
Czech Rep, Portugal). For the first two, we calculate real equity and bond total returns (equally weighted across these countries) over a 50-year and 20 year-history (using the CS Investment Returns Yearbook dataset). We include the third
group only in shorter-term analysis due to the obvious lack of
long-term data for some of the developing countries.
Small outperforms large
Figures 10 to 13 show the 50-year and 20-year histories for
stock and bond returns, respectively, for our large and small
country groupings, together with the world benchmark. Small
developed country equities clearly outstrip those in large countries, although small developed country bonds have only just
beaten large country ones over the past twenty years. The
Figure 10
In the long run small countries appear to have
outperformed – 50 years
Source: DMS database, Credit Suisse / IDC
Indexed, 1964 =1
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
1964
1969
1974
1979
1984
Large countries
1989
1994
1999
2004
2009
Small countries
above trends likely reflect the higher level of growth attained by
small countries throughout this period of globalization 7.
If we look at a shorter time frame, we can see that also in
the past five years, small developed country stock markets
have outperformed large country stock markets by close to one
percentage point a year. Yet there is a striking difference (see
7
Large developed (France, Germany, Japan, UK, USA, Spain, Italy, Australia), small developed (New Zealand, Hong Kong SAR, Singapore, Switzerland, Ireland, Belgium, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Austria and Norway) and
small developing (Estonia, Hungary, UAE, Qatar, Slovakia, Iceland, Israel,
Croatia, Latvia, Czech Rep, Portugal).
THE SUCCESS OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND MARKETS
12
Figure 14) in the relative performance of small developed
countries and small developing countries over the past five
years. Clearly, the latter have found it more difficult to benefit
from the global recovery following the 2008 crisis.
If we focus on profitability, we can see that small developed
markets have better returns. They earn a CFROIC® (cash flow
return on invested capital) of 8% or higher – by over three
percentage points – than that for large developed markets (exUSA, Figure 15). Small developing markets instead show a
CFROI similar to that of larger countries ex-USA (just above
5%). Note that the effect of excluding the USA in the large
country sample is two percentage points less in the overall
CFROIC. Higher CFROIs show a more efficient use of capital
and over time should translate into better stock market valuations. But are they?
Using our HOLT® database for this purpose, we are able to
compare the relative valuation of small developed markets and
small developing markets relative to the larger group.
Figure 12
Small country bond performance versus large for
the past 50 years
Source: DMS database, Credit Suisse / IDC
Indexed, 1964 = 1
12
10
8
6
4
2
0
1964 1969 1974 1979 1984 1989 1994 1999 2004 2009
Large countries
Small countries
Figure 13
Small country bond performance has held in past 20
years
Source: DMS database, Credit Suisse / IDC
Indexed, 1994 = 1
4
3
2
1
1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012
Large countries
Small countries
Figure 11
Figure 14
Small country equity performance has held in past
20 years
Small developed country equities just ahead of
large over the past five years
Source: DMS database, Credit Suisse / IDC
Source: DataStream, Credit Suisse / IDC
Indexed, 1994 = 1
5
160
Indexed, Feb 2010 = 100
150
4
140
130
3
120
110
2
100
90
1
1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012
Small countries
Large countries
80
2010
2011
Large countries
2012
2013
2014
2015
Small countries (old)
Small countries (developing)
THE SUCCESS OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND MARKETS
Figure 15
Small developed countries have higher CFROI than large developed ex USA
Source: HOLT, Credit Suisse
12
Small developed
10
10
8
8
CFROI (%)
CFROI (%)
12
6
Large developed ex USA
6
4
4
2
2
CFROI
2015
2014
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
1999
1998
1997
1995
2015
2014
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
1999
1998
1997
1996
1995
CFROI
1996
0
0
DR
DR
Figure 16
HOLT valuation metrics: Price/Book value
Source: HOLT, Credit Suisse
3.0
HOLT Price to Book
2.5
2.0
1.5
1.0
0.5
1995
1997
1999
2001
Small Countries - Developing
2003
Large Countries
2005
2007
Large Countries ex USA
2009
2011
2013
2015
Small Countries - Developed
HOLT valuation metrics: Economic P/E
Source: HOLT, Credit Suisse
40.0
35.0
Economic P/E
30.0
25.0
20.0
15.0
10.0
1995
1997
1999
Small Countries - Developing
2001
2003
Large Countries
2005
2007
Large Countries ex USA
2009
2011
2013
Small Countries - Developed
2015
13
THE SUCCESS OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND MARKETS
14
Using price to book valuation metrics, we can see that small
developed countries trade at 1.9 times, a premium to both the
large countries’ sample – 10% – and particularly large countries ex-USA – 46%. The same does not apply to small developing countries, which trade at a price to book value of just
1.1 times. Based on HOLT economic P/E ratios (defined as
enterprise value to HOLT net cash flows), large countries trade
at a slight premium over small countries – both developed and
developing – 26 times for large countries, 24 times for small
developed countries and 22 times for small developing countries (see Figure 16).
Figure 18a
Sector composition in old small countries
(developed)
Source: World Bank, Credit Suisse
6%
7%
Oil & Gas
7%
Basic Materials
Industrials
Consumer goods
25%
Health Care
23%
Consumer Services
Does volatility matter?
Telecommunications
Utilities
1%
1%
Volatility is an important consideration, and while it has moderated for all three country-based groups in recent years (Figure
17), the volatility of small country markets is historically greater
than for larger ones (by 1% on average if we compare small
developed countries to large ones). If we adjust for volatility
using Datastream indices, the comparative adjusted returns
remain higher for small developed countries compared to large
countries (Table 3).
Financials
10%
13%
Technology
7%
Table 3
Figure 18b
Risk adjusted returns
Sector composition in old small countries
(developing)
Source: Datastream, Credit Suisse
Source: World Bank, Credit Suisse
Large countries
Small countries
(old)
Small countries
(developing)
20 year
0.32
0.37
Data not available
9 year
0.08
0.11
–0.02
5 year
0.33
0.46
0.06
4% 2% 4%
Oil & Gas
Basic Materials
20%
29%
Industrials
Consumer goods
Health Care
One reason for the apparent outperformance of small developed country indices versus large ones may be sector composition. As a next step, we uncover the sector composition of
small country markets. We find that financials and industrials
are the biggest sectors in the small developed country sample
(Figures 18a and b), with financials having an even greater
representation in small developing country markets (29%). In
small developing countries, the telecommunications and utilities
sectors have a relatively meagre representation.
Consumer Services
Telecommunications
14%
Utilities
4%
Financials
4%
14%
5%
Technology
Figure 17
Figure 19
Volatilities have compressed in recent years
Small country sector weight-adjusted performance
for MSCI AC World
Source: DataStream, Credit Suisse / IDC
Source: DataStream, Credit Suisse / IDC
50%
Total return index (USD)
180
45%
40%
160
35%
140
30%
25%
120
20%
100
15%
80
10%
5%
2007
2008
2009
Large countries
2010
2011
Small countries (old)
2012
2013
2014
2015
Small countries (developing)
60
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
Aggregate old small stock markets
2012
2013
2014
MSCI Global (syn index)
THE SUCCESS OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND MARKETS
15
Table 4
Small developed countries relatively highly correlated (1990–2014)
Source: Datastream, Credit Suisse
Old Small
Ireland
Austria
Sweden
Belgium
Norway
Finland
Denmark
NZ
HK SAR
Singapore
Switzerland
Ireland
1.00
0.66
0.64
0.70
0.61
0.51
0.65
0.46
0.42
0.47
0.64
Austria
0.66
1.00
0.61
0.72
0.68
0.49
0.69
0.50
0.44
0.51
0.65
Sweden
0.64
0.61
1.00
0.69
0.69
0.72
0.67
0.48
0.53
0.54
0.70
Belgium
0.70
0.72
0.69
1.00
0.66
0.54
0.72
0.47
0.47
0.52
0.76
Norway
0.61
0.68
0.69
0.66
1.00
0.56
0.69
0.51
0.47
0.54
0.64
Finland
0.51
0.49
0.72
0.54
0.56
1.00
0.56
0.40
0.45
0.45
0.58
Denmark
0.65
0.69
0.67
0.72
0.69
0.56
1.00
0.47
0.47
0.51
0.67
NZ
0.46
0.50
0.48
0.47
0.51
0.40
0.47
1.00
0.47
0.51
0.46
HK SAR
0.42
0.44
0.53
0.47
0.47
0.45
0.47
0.47
1.00
0.74
0.47
Singapore
0.47
0.51
0.54
0.52
0.54
0.45
0.51
0.51
0.74
1.00
0.50
Switzerland
0.64
0.65
0.70
0.76
0.64
0.58
0.67
0.46
0.47
0.50
1.00
In order to model how sector bias might drive small country
returns, we have taken the broad MSCI AC World Index and
rebalanced its performance based on the sector weighting
profile that our small developed country profile had at the beginning of each of the last nine years. This suggests that, at
least in recent years (Figure 19), the sector effect has played a
role in driving small developed country performance. Over the
last nine years, one third of the annual excess return of small
developed countries relative to large developed countries is
explained by different sector weightings.
Diversification is another important issue. Within the small
country universe, using data going back to 1990, we find a
relatively high degree of correlation between the stock markets
in countries that belong in the small developed country group.
The average pairwise correlation across our 11 small developed countries is 0.57, with New Zealand generally having the
weakest correlation to other small states, while Switzerland has
a generally high correlation with other developed small country
markets (Table 4). In contrast, we found much lower (average
pairwise correlation of 0.45) between small developing country
markets. Both, however, show lower correlations than those
we observed over the same period for the stock markets in our
large countries sample: 0.63.
Companies in small developed countries
To go one step further in our analysis, we decided to examine
how different types of companies have performed in small
developed countries. What we wanted to test is the effect of
“small countries” on domestic-oriented companies and globally
oriented companies. We also wanted to compare these two
groups to similar ones in larger countries. Are the examples of
country export “champions” such as Novartis or Ericsson in
small countries an exception or do they support a more general
trend?
For this purpose, we use our HOLT database and the
Worldscope database, which gives us access to company data
as far back as 1995. In order to avoid survivorship/hindsight
bias, we construct five baskets of companies across our small
developed country universe each year on the basis of how
much of total sales is driven by “foreign sales.” We do the
same for the larger country sample. We also undertake several
controls for a potential sector or country effect due to the small
sample size.
THE SUCCESS OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND MARKETS
16
Figure 20
Sectors: Export orientation and performance
Source: DMS database, Credit Suisse / IDC
Small developed countries
Sector performance, 1995 - 2015
16.0%
14.0%
12.0%
y = 0.0463x + 0.0585
R² = 0.0614
10.0%
8.0%
6.0%
4.0%
2.0%
0.0%
20.0%
Sector foreign sales
30.0%
40.0%
50.0%
Sector performance, 1995 - 2015
60.0%
70.0%
80.0%
90.0%
Large countries
18.0%
16.0%
14.0%
y = 0.2074x - 0.0186
R² = 0.3216
12.0%
10.0%
8.0%
6.0%
4.0%
2.0%
0.0%
20.0%
Sector foreign sales
25.0%
30.0%
35.0%
40.0%
In both large markets and small developed markets, there is
a positive correlation between how export-oriented a sector is
– in terms of “foreign” sales – and the relative cumulative 10year price performance (Figure 20). This should not surprise,
as with the increased globalization of the world economy, export companies have been able to reach a larger and larger
client base.
The relationship is more significant for large countries than
for small developed countries. This might be explained by the
fact that exporters in large markets have in most case the
advantage of serving not just the “global” markets, but also a
45.0%
50.0%
55.0%
60.0%
65.0%
large “domestic” market, allowing for lower operating costs
(marketing, distribution, etc.).
Dissecting this analysis first on sector basis, we can see
that in the case of large countries, tobacco, beverages and oil
show up as outperformers relative to the large markets’ composite performance (Figure 21). For large markets, these
sectors show “foreign” sales in the 54%–59% range. Conversely, among the more domestically oriented sectors – “foreign” sales of 17%–25% – only retailers and financials show
better performance than the markets' composite performance.
If we do the same for small developed countries, we find
Figure 21
Exporting vs domestic sector: annualized performance for large economies (1995–2015, market capitalization weighted)
Source: DMS database, Credit Suisse / IDC
0%
5%
10%
15%
Tobacco [59%]
16.4%
Beverages [54%]
10.1%
Oil, Gas, Coal & Related
Services [56%]
0%
20%
9.2%
6%
8%
6.9%
Large Countries
6.8%
6.7%
Transportation [25%]
Automotive [57%]
6.6%
Utilities [23%]
Miscellaneous [29%]
10%
7.9%
Financial [21%]
6.8%
5.2%
4%
Retailers [17%]
Large Countries
Metal Producers [54%]
2%
4.8%
3.4%
Top exporting sector performance (foreign sales in brackets)
Top domestic sector performance (foreign sales in brackets)
Large countries aggregate performance
Large countries aggregate performance
THE SUCCESS OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND MARKETS
17
Figure 22
Exporting vs. domestic sector: annualized performance for small economies (1995–2015, market capitalization weighted)
Source: DMS database, Credit Suisse / IDC
0% 2% 4% 6% 8% 10% 12% 14%
Drugs, Cosmetics & Health Care
[81%]
12.9%
Chemicals [75%]
9.5%
Small Countries
8.6%
Electronics [78%]
7.2%
Apparel [78%]
6.6%
Textiles [76%]
0%
2%
4%
6%
10%
Aerospace [44%]
9.0%
Small Countries
8.6%
Transportation [40%]
7.3%
Financial [33%]
7.2%
Utilities [31%]
2.2%
8%
6.3%
Printing & Publishing [26%]
5.7%
Top exporting sector performance (foreign sales in brackets)
Top domestic sector performance (foreign sales in brackets)
Small countries aggregate performance
Small countries aggregate performance
that the export sectors that outperform the composite index of
the small developed countries are in a higher value-added
category and require higher R&D spending (Figure 22). It is
also noticeable that, in the case of small countries, the range
of “foreign” sales we need to consider is much higher: between
75% and 81%. These are companies where foreign markets
are significantly more important than the domestic ones.
If we now focus on the countries rather than the sectors and
start with the larger countries (see Figure 23); we can see that
there is not a big differential in the performance of export
versus domestic-oriented sectors either on a market cap
weighted basis or an equal-weight basis. In the USA, Japan
and Germany, export-oriented companies are consistently
better performers. This could be due to the dominance of
these three markets in tech and engineering, both requiring
high levels of R&D.
For the small developed country sample (Figure 24), exporters outperform domestic-oriented stocks on an equal-weighted
basis, but the opposite is true on a market cap weighted basis.
These markets tend to have fewer stocks and large companies
can distort the general trend when using market cap weighted
data. Again we should conclude that there is not much differ-
ence. Yet, averages might be misleading, particularly in this
case. Switzerland and Belgium are the only two countries that
show exporters outperforming domestic-oriented companies on
both market cap weighted and equal-weighted bases. Denmark
and Sweden are the only ones where domestic companies outperform exporters on both bases.
Our view, however, is that to identify and assess general
trends for smaller countries and markets, we need to look
more on an equal weighted basis in order to avoid potential
distortions induced by a few large market cap stocks. In this
case, exporters outperform domestic companies by 1% over
ten years. It is also interesting to notice that this is also the
case in seven out of the nine countries in our sample. Conversely, for our sample of large countries, only three out of
eight show exporters outperforming domestic-oriented stocks.
In Table 5, we show a list of some of the leading export companies for both the small developed and large country samples.
The companies in this table are those that rank in the top
HOLT quintile score, have market cap higher than USD 3
billion, have foreign reserves of at least 30%, and have a neutral or positive recommendation under our Investment Banking
rating system.
Figure 23
Exporters vs. markets: Annualized performance for large economies (1995–2015)
Source: DMS database, Credit Suisse / IDC
Unweighted
Weighted
8.2%
7.6%
Average
United States
United Kingdom
5.7%
6.4%
Spain
Japan
1.3%
9.6%
9.0%
8.0%
7.6%
Germany
7.8%
6.9%
France
6.7%
Australia
0.04
Exporters
6.1%
5.4%
6.4%
United Kingdom
Spain
Japan
Italy
0.02
United States
2.8%
7.3%
7.8%
0
7.7%
7.5%
Average
0.06
0.08
Market
2.6%
Italy
5.8%
6.5%
7.2%
6.3%
France
9.8%
10.1%
0.1
7.7%
8.7%
5.2%
Germany
9.0%
8.4%
0.12
5.7%
Australia
0
0.02
0.04
Exporters
0.06
Market
8.5%
8.6%
7.0%
0.08
0.1
THE SUCCESS OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND MARKETS
18
Figure 24
Exporting vs. domestic sector: annualized performance for small economies (1995–2015)
Source: DMS database, Credit Suisse / IDC
Unweighted
Weighted
Average
Finland
Israel
Denmark
Singapore
H.6$5
Switzerland
Sweden
Norway
Belgium
8.5%
9.8%
-1.7%
-0.05
4.9%
2.9%
4.2%
5.1%
10.5%
7.7%
6.9%
10.0%
7.1%
10.7%
9.3%
11.4%
12.6%
7.0%
8.8%
11.0%
7.1%
0
Exporters
PHOTO:ISTOCKPHOTO.COM/CHRISTOBOLO
0.05
Market
0.1
0.15
9.8%
8.8%
Average
Finland
Israel
Denmark
Singapore
HK SAR
Switzerland
Sweden
Norway
Belgium
7.7%
7.3%
2.6%
5.3%
5.2%
4.7%
12.0%
7.8%
9.1%
7.6%
8.8%
4.7%
11.3%
12.5%
15.0%
8.5%
7.3%
5.8%
0
0.05
Exporters
0.1
Market
0.15
0.2
THE SUCCESS OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND MARKETS
Table 5
Selected export success stories; large and small developed countries
Source: Datastream, HOLT, CS research
LARGE
SMALL DEVELOPED
Equity performance (CAGR)
Company
Country
GICS sector
Foreign sales (%)
Last 5 years (%)
Relative to local market (%)
Taro Pharm. Ind.
Israel
Health care
97
65
65
Galaxy Entertainment Gp.
Hong Kong SAR
Consumer discretionary
97
60
54
Smurfit Kappa Group
Ireland
Materials
71
30
17
Chr. Hansen Holding
Denmark
Materials
100
28
14
Novo Nordisk 'B'
Denmark
Health care
76
28
14
Assa Abloy 'B'
Sweden
Industrials
94
26
14
China Gas Holdings
Hong Kong SAR
Utilities
100
25
19
Paddy Power
Ireland
Consumer discretionary
48
24
11
Ryanair Holdings
Ireland
Industrials
89
24
11
Cheung Kong Infr. Hdg.
Hong Kong SAR
Utilities
35
21
14
Anheuser-Busch Inbev
Belgium
Consumer staples
90
21
10
Kone 'B'
Finland
Industrials
56
20
16
Sampo 'A'
Finland
Financials
52
19
15
Atlas Copco 'A'
Sweden
Industrials
70
18
7
Sika 'B'
Switzerland
Materials
100
18
7
UPM-Kymmene
Finland
Materials
90
15
11
Great Eastern Hdg.
Singapore
Financials
41
14
7
Aryzta
Switzerland
38
12
1
Telenor
Norway
73
11
10
DBS Group Holdings
Singapore
Consumer staples
Telecommunication
services
Financials
31
10
4
Solvay
Belgium
Materials
99
9
–1
Umicore
Belgium
Materials
97
7
–4
Alfa Laval
Sweden
Industrials
97
6
–5
Edp. Energias De Portugal
Portugal
Utilities
48
5
11
ABB Ltd N
Switzerland
Industrials
66
2
–9
Sembcorp Marine
Singapore
Industrials
91
–2
–9
Vestas Windsystems
Denmark
Industrials
49
–4
–18
Erste Group Bank
Austria
Financials
34
–9
–7
Raiffeisen Bank Intl.
Austria
Financials
40
–20
–19
Continental
Germany
Consumer discretionary
76
39
29
Apple
United States
Information technology
62
33
18
Prudential
United Kingdom
Financials
69
30
22
Safran
France
Industrials
79
26
20
WPP
United Kingdom
Consumer discretionary
34
21
14
Daimler
Germany
100
20
11
Softbank
Japan
40
19
12
CSL
Australia
Consumer discretionary
Telecommunication
services
Health care
86
19
14
Toyota Motor
Japan
67
14
7
Vodafone Group
United Kingdom
95
14
6
L'Oreal
France
Consumer discretionary
Telecommunication
services
Consumer staples
89
13
7
Johnson & Johnson
United States
Health care
53
13
–2
Allianz
Germany
Financials
44
12
2
General Electric
United States
Industrials
52
11
3
Pernod-Ricard
France
Consumer staples
65
9
3
Mitsubishi UFJ Finl.Gp.
Japan
Financials
33
8
0
Enel
Italy
Utilities
58
1
0
Iberdrola
Spain
Utilities
91
0
–3
Repsol YPF
Spain
Energy
45
–1
–5
Assicurazioni Generali
Italy
Financials
54
–3
–4
Banco Santander
Spain
Financials
37
–5
–9
BHP Billiton
Australia
Materials
94
–8
–12
Unicredit
Italy
Financials
37
–17
–18
19
THE SUCCESS OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND MARKETS
20
Imprint
PUBLISHER
CREDIT SUISSE AG
Research Institute
Paradeplatz 8
CH-8070 Zurich
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PRODUCTION MANAGEMENT
INVESTMENT STRATEGY & RESEARCH
INVESTMENT PUBLISHING
Markus Kleeb (Head)
Ross Hewitt
Katharina Schlatter
AUTHORS
Stefano Natella
Michael O’Sullivan
CONTRIBUTORS
Antonios Koutsoukis
Krithika Subramanian
Vinit Sinha
Prateek Nigudkar
Shailesh Jha
Pratyasha Rath
Utkarsh Goklani
EDITORIAL DEADLINE
23 March 2015
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THE SUCCESS OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND MARKETS
21
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