Mobius' emerging market dominance weakens as fund suffers record outflows

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#1
A real test for Mr. Mobius. That is an additional challenge for those fund managers with OPM...

Mobius' emerging market dominance weakens as fund suffers record outflows
15 Apr 2014 05:49
[HONG KONG] Mark Mobius' Templeton Asian Growth Fund, Asia's biggest equity mutual fund, suffered record outflows in the March quarter in a sign investors are losing faith with the emerging markets guru.

Returns from Mobius' US$11.7 billion fund from Franklin Templeton Investment missed the benchmark last year by the most in 14 years, after some of the stocks Mobius selected fell as a result of political unrest in Thailand and waning appetite for commodities in China.

The fund recovered in January-March to make money in a volatile quarter for emerging market equities, but investors still pulled out a net US$1.9 billion, showed estimates by global fund tracker Lipper, a Thomson Reuters company.

The outflows, at over 14 per cent of the fund's December-end assets, compared with US$5.8 billion net outflows or 5 per cent of assets managed by the rest of Asia ex-Japan equity funds in the March quarter, showed data from Lipper. - Reuters

Source: Business Times Breaking News
“夏则资皮,冬则资纱,旱则资船,水则资车” - 范蠡
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#2
http://www.afr.com/markets/equity-market...507-ggw1dt

May 7 2015 at 11:25 AM Updated May 7 2015 at 11:55 AM SAVE ARTICLE PRINT The end of Mark Mobius's reign as king of emerging-market stocks
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Mobius still crisscrosses continents 250 days a year
Mobius still crisscrosses continents 250 days a year Fairfax
by Ye Xie
For a quarter of a century the name Mark Mobius has been synonymous with investing in developing markets. A bald, energetic, New York native who often dresses in white suits, Mobius is constantly tweeting and appearing on television from St. Petersburg to São Paulo encouraging investors to put money into fast-growing developing economies.

A Mark Mobius comic book published in Asia in 2007 chronicled his globe-trotting exploits. (Really.) In the US he was voted by his peers onto a list of the top 10 investors of the 20th century, putting him alongside Warren Buffett, Julian Robertson, and George Soros. What Bill Gross was to bonds, Mobius was to emerging markets: the King.

His reign may be coming to an end. Like Gross, Mobius, 78, has posted mediocre numbers in recent years and seen investors depart. While they still make money, 11 of the 13 largest funds that Mobius oversees at Franklin Templeton Investments have underperformed their benchmarks over the past five years. At his zenith in 2011, Mobius oversaw $US39 billion.

Today that figure is down to $US26 billion. And in December, his flagship Asian Growth Fund lost its long-held position as the region's largest to First State Investments' Asia Pacific Leaders Fund. "He's one of the few well-known managers in emerging markets," says Todd Rosenbluth, director of mutual fund and ETF research at S&P Capital IQ. "Unfortunately, the track record is below average. Investors are more frustrated."

In an e-mail, Mobius said his strategy of investing in undervalued stocks can falter in "sentiment-driven" environments, where investors focus more on the overall economic picture than on company fundamentals. "As value investors, we have to have the patience and conviction to weather sometimes long periods of volatility," Mobius wrote. "We go into markets when others are fleeing, and while some of our fund performance has struggled at certain points in time, we believe that with our contrarian approach, our shareholders will be rewarded in the long term."

Many emerging-markets fund managers have floundered as China's expansion slows and former standouts such as Brazil and Russia post disappointing growth. Seventeen of the 33 US-based developing-nation stock funds with more than $US1 billion in assets have trailed their benchmarks over the past five years, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. "It hasn't been a great period for any emerging-markets manager," says Peter Walls, a money manager at Unicorn Asset Management who invests in Mobius's funds. "He's going to make a comeback."

Born in Hempstead, New York, to a German father and a Puerto Rican mother, Mobius got his Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He joined Templeton, Galbraith & Hansberger in 1987, when investing in developing countries was still a novel idea. After being tapped by firm founder John Templeton to manage the Templeton Emerging Markets Fund, the company's first foray into that territory, Mobius developed a reputation for sniffing out stocks that are undervalued relative to their growth potential.

He still crisscrosses continents 250 days a year, feeding on-the-ground research to his team of 50 money managers, analysts, and researchers in 18 offices worldwide handling day-to-day operations of the more than 30 funds he oversees.

The last half-decade has been a struggle for the group, which has made ill-timed bets on energy and mining companies while underinvesting in technology stocks. As of March 31, Templeton Asian Growth held 33 per cent of its assets in energy and material stocks, which account for only 9 per cent of the fund's benchmark, the MSCI AC Asia ex Japan index. The fund has gained 4.3 per cent annually over the past five years, compared with 8.1 per cent for the index. It's trailed 44 of 46 similar funds with assets of at least $US500 million over that same time span, while charging investors 2.2 per cent annually, the second most in the group.

One of the fund's largest holdings, the stock of Sesa Sterlite, India's top aluminum producer, has tumbled 51 per cent over the past five years as slowing growth in China cut short a global commodities boom. Another, Yanzhou Coal Mining, a Chinese company, has fallen 66 per cent since the end of April 2010, while the Chinese market surged. "They have a big team, but it's not generating performance," says Germaine Share, an analyst at Morningstar in Hong Kong.

Even with the recent under-performance, an initial investment of $US100,000 in the Templeton Emerging Markets Fund 28 years ago would be worth about $US3.3 million today, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Mobius has yet to announce any plans to retire or scale back his workload. In the last days of April, he wrote a blog on foreign reserves, talked about Greece's finances on CNBC, and celebrated the debut of Templeton's new Romanian fund on the London Stock Exchange. Countries such as Romania and Mongolia could be the next frontier that enriches investors, he said.

"It's clearly worrying when you have a period of three, four years that hasn't been particularly good," says Charles Cade, head of investment companies research at Numis Securities in London. "The track record isn't as good as it used to be. Emerging markets is more of a mainstream play now. Adding value is a lot tougher, and it's much harder to maintain performance."

Bloomberg
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#3
I stand by what I said about Mobius 15 months ago... Find better commentators to follow than waste time on him. He has been calling to sell China 6 months ago. I'm sure he will be right EVENTUALLY like the proverbial stopped clock.

(13-02-2014, 12:52 PM)specuvestor Wrote:
(12-02-2014, 08:51 PM)CityFarmer Wrote:
(12-02-2014, 06:35 PM)specuvestor Wrote: Agree... IMHO Mobius is one of the most overrated salesman masquarading as fund manager

Well, I respect your opinion, but not sure the ground of the opinion?

Base on his track records stated in wikipedia, I found no clue on "salesman masquarading as fund manager"?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Mobius

Based on the published figures/ papers many S-chips looks very cheap also with no hint of "snakeoil" as well Big Grin

I have observed and respect many managers from Bill Miller to Kyle Bass and of course Buffett, but Mobius record is not top of the list. I wish you the best if you buy their emerging markets funds. 路遥知马力 which is similarly why I have higher regards for Paul Tudor than Paulson.

http://www.valuebuddies.com/thread-3344-...l#pid73961
Before you speak, listen. Before you write, think. Before you spend, earn. Before you invest, investigate. Before you criticize, wait. Before you pray, forgive. Before you quit, try. Before you retire, save. Before you die, give. –William A. Ward

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#4
The returns of Franklin Templeton Unit Trusts are poor compare to other Funds.
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