Investments in developing countries, such as China, India and Russia have been very profitable over the decade. Rodrigo wrote the article below and he seems to think that this will still be the case for the 21st century. I definitely have investments in China, Russia and India through Landau Securities.
The Countries of the Future, Or Where to Invest and Make Money!
The United States has experienced significant growth rates in the last 150 years. Over this period, America has gone from a small farming economy to the greatest power in the globe, with significant gains for its citizens in quality of life. Today, the average American family has too many cars, TVs, computers, and a huge amount of debt!!! How much more can they still continue to buy? To whom are companies selling their products?
Business owners have realized this problem years ago, and therefore “globalization” was created. Well, not exactly created, but 20 years ago the American government, supported by its largest corporations, started to push the concept of “open markets” into developing countries. The idea, as said, was that poor countries should be selling metals, oil and food to industrial countries, who would process these materials and, in return, sell back industrial products to the poor countries, which required significant capital and skilled labor (at much, much higher prices by the way). This way, American companies could benefit from the enormous consumer markets available in developing countries. Oh, almost forgot: many of the products that poor countries could produce, like food, would not be able to be sold in the United States, not to displease some of the voters (called farmers) of the government.
As things progressed, American companies realized that if the U.S. would let commodities come in, why not take advantage also of much cheaper labor prices in these countries and relocate the manufacturing operations of some of the factories they did not want, like coal and steel? This way these companies could make much more money selling to the same crowed!!! Later on, as workers were also trained on other types of jobs, other industries also relocated to countries like China, Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam and Korea.
But the U.S. still had services businesses to generate jobs … until the internet made it much easier to provide services online and countries like India and even Ireland took part of that cake too.
But what do countries like Brazil, Russia, India and China have in common and why is so many people talking about them? And what does that has to do with the story above?
These countries have a large population, underserved, eager to buy, eager to increase their quality of life. And with more jobs relocating from industrial to developing countries, they now have the means to buy more stuff.
The countries that will be able to sustain high and consistent growth rates over the next decades will be these same countries with big domestic consumer markets. China growing in manufacturing, India in services, and Russia and Brazil producing the resources that the new world needs to grow. This is the new order of the 21st century. And where there is a market, there are companies willing to serve it.
If you want to invest in companies that will sell more, make more money, grow faster, you have to invest in companies that are selling to these markets, to these consumers.
Brazil is a democracy, de-regulated market, a peaceful country, no meaningful natural disasters, no ethnic or religious tensions, and rich in natural resources. It is a country that experienced significant progress in the last decade, and yet has a lot to come. If you pick the right industries, the right companies and the right investments, your returns can be very, very significant.
|
Rodrigo Lowndes is a partner in private equity firm Emerging Capital. He was previously a managing director and president of Morgan Stanley & Co. in Brazil. He currently publishes a site with investment ideas on Brazil, http://www.investing-in-brazil.com/ Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Rodrigo_Lowndes |


0 responses so far ↓
There are no comments yet...Kick things off by filling out the form below.
Leave a Comment