The
International Monetary Fund has recently published
its second global survey of portfolio investment.
This study, titled "Coordinated
Portfolio Investment Survey" (CPIS), collected
data on cross-border holdings of equity and debt securities
in 67 economies in 2001. The first CPIS survey was
conducted in 1997 and according to the IMF website,
starting with the 2001 survey, the CPIS will be carried
out annually. The CPIS seeks to provide comprehensive
global information on cross-border ownership of securities.
The CPIS results include securities held by portfolio
investors (including monetary authorities) but exclude
securities held by direct investors--those which hold
a minimum of 10 percent of the shares of the entity
that issues the securities.
CPIS shows that no developing country is among the
top 20 recipients of portfolio investment in 2001.
Top twenty recipients, all of whom are developed countries,
account for more than 91 percent of total portfolio
liabilities. Remaining 218 countries account for the
other nine percent. The concentration of portfolio
investment becomes even more evident from the fact
that top 10 countries hold about 74 percent of total
portfolio liabilities.
These findings are interesting because since the
late 1980s and early 1990s, multilateral institutions
like the World Bank and the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) actively encouraged developing countries
to open up their economies to attract portfolio capital
inflows. In fact, one of the essential components
of the Structural Adjustment programme imposed by
the IMF during the late 1980s was widespread liberalization
of the financial sector of developing countries and
removal of restrictions on foreign investors' entry
into the domestic economies of these countries. As
a result, a number of developing countries initiated
sweeping liberalization in their domestic economic
system to attract foreign portfolio investment. Initially,
portfolio investors responded positively to these
developments and significant amount of foreign portfolio
investment came into these countries. But the spate
of financial crisis that surfaced in the developing
countries during the late 1990s has changed the situation
completely.
The relative decline of portfolio investment as a
source of private capital flow will be evident from
the following figure. Time series data from IMF's
World Economic Outlook show that net private portfolio
investment flow to emerging markets accounted for
64.5 percent of total private capital flow in 1994,
however, after 2000, these countries are experiencing
net outflow of private portfolio investment flow (Figure
1).
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Source:
IMF World Economic Outlook, September 2002
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According to CPIS 2001, cross-border holdings of
portfolio investment reached US$12.5 trillion in the
67 economies in 2001. Of the total cross-border
holdings reflected in the survey, US$5.1 trillion was
in equity securities and US$7.4 trillion in debt
securities. Data also show that compared to 1997,
there is a significant shift towards short term debt
securities in 2001. From 1.6 percent of total
portfolio investment in 1997, the share of short term
debt increased to 8.3 percent in 2001 (figure 2).
The survey results also reveal that total stock of
portfolio liabilities has more than doubled from US$
6.1 trillion in 1997 to US$ 12.5 trillion in 2001.
However, if the reported countries are divided into
developed and developing countries
[1], it shows that
stocks of portfolio investment in developed countries
have grown much faster than those in the developing
ones (Table 1). In fact, in more than 50 developing
countries there has been a net outflow of portfolio
investment during the period 1997-2001. As a
consequence, after 1997, share of developing countries
in total portfolio liabilities has gone down quite
significantly (Table 1).
Table
1 |
|
Portfolio
Liabilities
(in US$ Trillion) |
Share
in Total Portfolio Liabilities (%) |
Year |
1997 |
2001 |
1997 |
2001 |
Developed
Countries |
11.92 |
11.92 |
91.13 |
94.95 |
Developing
Countries |
0.63 |
0.63 |
8.87 |
5.05 |
Total |
12.55 |
12.55 |
100.00 |
100.00 |
The sudden reversal and decline in portfolio investment
is noteworthy because since the late 80s, financial
systems of most of developing countries have moved
from a bank-based system to a more stock market based
system. The reverse flow of portfolio investment is
likely to have serious repercussions on the economy
of these countries. Secondly, recent researches, including
one
study from the IMF, are providing overwhelming
evidence that portfolio investment and increased financial
globalization has not benefited growth in developing
countries. On the contrary, increased financial integration
has increased the vulnerability of these economies
by exposing their economies to the volatilities of
short term capital flows. The results of this survey
clearly show that the shift of focus of portfolio
investors has moved away from most of the developing
countries. Though portfolio investment has grown more
than 100 percent between 1997 and 2001, most of the
new investments are going to the developed countries.
CPIS shows that developing countries and emerging
markets are no longer attractive destinations.
[1] The term 'emerging market'
is generally used to describe the group of developing
countries that are pursuing substantial political and
economic reforms and a more complete integration into
the global economy. In general, emerging markets
countries are characterized by a developing commercial
and financial infrastructure, with significant
potential for economic growth and eased capital market
participation by foreign investors. About 90 percent
of total portfolio investment to developing countries
goes to emerging markets.
[2] For this classification, tax havens like Bermuda
and Cayman Islands are taken as developed countries.
March 26, 2003.
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