RECENT NEWS
Reuters  10 hrs ago  Comment 
Corruption costs developing nations $20 to $40 billion each year, while emerging markets and financial centres are increasingly havens for stolen assets, a top World Bank official said on Saturday.
TheStreet.com  Nov 8  Comment 
From the Best of TSC TV: Simone Beer, portfolio manager for the Metzler/Payden European Emerging Markets Fund, says the rally in Russian stocks will continue as commodity prices move higher. Original air date: 11/5/09
Reuters  Nov 7  Comment 
Corruption costs developing nations $20 to $40 billion each year, while emerging markets and financial centers are increasingly havens for stolen assets, a top World Bank official said Saturday.
Sydney Morning Herald  Nov 7  Comment 
The world's largest and top emerging economies agreed at a G20 meeting here Saturday a timetable on mutual monitoring of their economic policy, a European source told AFP.
Wall Street Journal  Nov 7  Comment 
Is the money that investors are pouring into emerging-markets ETFs distorting valuations and pumping up a potentially monstrous bubble?
ETF Database  Nov 6  Comment 
The October numbers for the ETF industry are out, and it was another good month across the board. Total ETF/ETN assets now stand at more than $707 billion based on data reported by the National Stock Exchange, up from about $705 billion in...
Index Universe  Nov 6  Comment 
  iShares Trust is expanding its roster of exchange-traded funds linked to emerging markets with the registration of two ETFs focused on the region’s financial sector and materials sector. The iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Financial...
CANOE.ca  Nov 6  Comment 
Finance ministers from the world's leading rich and developing countries are gathering in St. Andrews, Scotland Friday to begin the difficult negotiations over how to even out the imbalances weighing on the world economy.
Reuters  Nov 6  Comment 
A global economic recovery and extensive support for emerging markets from multilateral lenders have driven up distressed debt prices, making the market more attractive for emerging sovereign borrowers to restructure debt.
CNBC  Nov 5  Comment 
Discussing the impact of the huge wage disparity between the U.S. and emerging economies and why it will "utterly destroy the dollar", with Damon Vickers, chief investment officer of Nine Points Capital Partners and CNBC's Martin Soong.
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TOP CONTRIBUTORS

The term Emerging markets is used by investment analysts to categorize countries that are in a transitional phase between developing countries that are just beginning to industrialize and countries that are fully developed. The main significance of the use of the term is that investments in emerging markets are assumed to carry greater risk and offer less safety in investment. The term is often used interchangeably with developing markets, though this is somewhat inaccurate. Examples of emerging markets include the BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India, and China), several Southeast Asian countries, Eastern Europe, and parts of Africa and Latin America.

Emerging markets are characterized by strong economic growth, resulting in an often marked rise in GDP and disposable income. As a result, people in emerging countries are often able to buy goods and services that they previously would not have been able to afford. This provides international companies with the opportunity to tap large, new customer bases, potentially driving significant growth for a number of companies and industries. Though disposable incomes in emerging markets are rising, many of their citizens are still relatively poor. Luxury goods such as high-end automobiles and designer clothes are sure to benefit from the increased purchasing power of emerging economies, but everyday luxuries such as cell phones and brand name food products are becoming popular much more quickly. For example, the number of wireless subscribers in India grew at a compound annual growth rate of 91% from 2000 to 2005, and Coca-Cola Company (KO) predicts that the BRIC countries will account for 41% of the company's growth by 2008.

Companies that benefit from growth in emerging markets

Auto companies

Food and beverage manufacturers

  • Coca-Cola Company (KO), Pepsico (PEP), Kraft Foods (KFT), and other food and beverage manufacturers have seen strong growth in emerging markets in recent years. As incomes rise, packaged food becomes more accessible for a larger percentage of the population, stimulating demand for these companies' products.

Cell phones

  • Vodafone AirTouch Public Limited Company (VOD) recently bought a controlling stake in the fourth-largest mobile service provider in India, Hutchison Essar. This was seen as a strategic move on Vodafone's part, as the Indian cell phone market is among the fastest-growing in the world.
  • China Mobile (Hong Kong) (CHL) is the largest wireless provider in China, a rapidly growing market for cell phones and wireless service.
  • Research in Motion (RIMM) recently announced that it had been granted permission to sell its popular Blackberry smart phone in China. Though it took eight years to gain approval, this partnership with China Mobile could significantly boost RIMM's subscriber growth rate.

For more information, see Mobile Phone Adoption in Developing Countries and Mobile Phone Usage in China

Raw material suppliers

  • BHP Billiton (BHP), Rio Tinto (RTP) and other integrated mining companies have already benefitted from the explosive demand growth of emerging markets, especially China.

Industrial gas companies

  • Praxair (PX), Air Products and Chemicals (APD), and other industrial gas companies stand to benefit as demand for their product grows; current per capita gas consumption in emerging markets is very low compared to developed countries. As consumption rises, demand for industrial gases will be stimulated.

Advertising Firms

  • As growth in advertising spending slows in mature markets such as the United States and Western Europe, advertising conglomerates like Omnicom Group (OMC) and Interpublic Group of Companies (IPG) are shifting their focus to Russia, China, India and other emerging markets, where advertising spending is growing at much higher rates.
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