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Use China to predict the future of equities

The column where top professionals give their views on a range of personal finance issues

July 16, 2009 10:03
1 min read

At the start of the century, strong economic growth in places like China and India prompted a new investment perspective.

The BRICs (Brazil, Russia, India and China) concept was born and equity funds were developed to accommodate a new desire to invest in those countries. Soon, some economists proposed that a decoupling between BRICs and developed countries was occurring.

People thought strong economic growth would insulate the BRICs from a crisis elsewhere. Not surprisingly, the decoupling idea was rejected when the recent crisis seemed to affect everyone; the world is just too economically interrelated.

But lately, interest in “decoupling” has re-emerged, following news that China and India are exhibiting significant growth. Together with the stimulus packages in the USA, UK and Europe, an even more painful and protracted recession can perhaps be avoided. The more positive outlook has lifted equity markets.