Merrill Lynch: Pakistan still favorite investment destination despite external interference external export of terror from other countries to Pakistan

The fundamentals of the Pakistani economy are sound. Arab and Asian money is still flowing into the Stock Exchange and the entire country looks like a construction site. You don’t read all about the 9 new 5 star hotels being developed in Karachi, or the flyover, and the motorways. You don’t hear about the massive idustrialization and the six industrial zones being set up by China. You don’t hear about giant new cities springing up where there was only desert. Pakistan has the 4th largest coal reserves in the world and now most of the cars run on Liquid Petroleum Gas.

There is excitement in the economic air and stock exchange reflects it. My servant from 30 years ago called me today–from his own mobile! I was in schock, but shouldn’t have been. 85 million Pakistanis have cell phone now and that number is growing.

Pakistan has the largest WiMax (Huge 17 city wife Hot spot) on hte planet and it is now being upgraded to a nationwide WiMax. With the Free Trade Agrement with China, the Chinese market will be open to Pakistani businesses, and Chinese businesses will use Pakistani soil to build and export through the new port city of Gwadar.

Emar International is spending $28 Billion on constructiong two new islands. They are also constructing Manora into a new area worth billions of Dollars. Islamabad is spreading way beyond Fateh Jang, which used to be a backwater “tea spot”. 

The 5000 year old ancient trade routes between Pakistan and China are being revived with modern freeways that were ocnstructed 20 years ago. 5000 years ago theThe 5000 year old ancient trade routes between Pakistan and China are being revived with modern freeways that were ocnstructed 20 years ago. 5000 years ago the Harrappan Pakistanis were trading with the ChineseThe ancient trade routes between Pakistan and China are being revived with modern freewaysTrade and Investment from “Dilmun” to “Melhulla” is nothing new. It used to be barter, and then “Kawris” were used. Then the Mughal Mohors were exchanged. Then the Rupees was used across the gulf during British times.  Trade between the Pakistanis and the Arabs of the United Arab Emerites have been going on for more than 5000 years. A few balsts cannot stop arrangements that have been going on for decades and centuries. With Oil prices at a record $100 per barrell, the Arabs will have more than $400 Billion in cash. After the Duabi Ports fiasco, this cash is not flowing back to the States as it used to. This cash is now being invested in countries like Pakistan.

Despite Political Turmoil, Stock Analysts Say Pakistan Has Its Attraction By Heda Bayron, Hong Kong, 21 January 2008

Assassination, riots and bombings hardly make Pakistan an investor’s dream. But as VOA’s Heda Bayron reports from our Asia News Center in Hong Kong, some stock analysts say Pakistan offers opportunities as well as risk.
A Pakistani stock broker stands before a panel at Karachi Stock Exchange, KSE, in Karachi, Pakistan (file photo)

At a time when Western magazine covers call Pakistan the world’s most dangerous country, Mark Matthews, Asia stock strategist at the U.S. investment bank Merrill Lynch in Hong Kong, is upbeat about Pakistan. He says Pakistan is his number two favorite market, after Hong Kong.

“When you watch television or pick up a newspaper everything is blood and gore,” Matthews said. “When you go to the country and you do your homework, you see that it’s a fantastic economy, growing 6.5 to seven percent.”

Merrill Lynch said in a recent report that Pakistan is unique, with one of the highest economic growth rates in Asia, cheap stocks and a stock market largely insulated from Wall Street’s troubles, which have dragged down Asia’s major indexes.

That positive forecast came even after Pakistan’s central bank reduced its forecast for economic growth to seven percent or less, from an earlier prediction of 7.2 percent. That move followed the assassination of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and an exodus of foreign stock investors because of months of political protests and militant violence.

The State Bank of Pakistan says portfolio investments – which include stock investments – fell more than 90 percent between July to November last year compared with the same period the previous year.

Matthews says the political factor in Pakistan is “overstated”. He says even if another high-ranking political figure is killed, it will not spoil Pakistan’s economic growth, which is fueled largely by consumption.

“Basically 99 percent of Pakistanis … aspire for the same things that everybody else does, a mobile phone, a television, a motorcycle,” Matthews said. “The one percent or much less who are not like that, well, they will be thorn on the side of the country for some time but it’s certainly not enough to derail the strong economic growth or, for that matter, the strong stock market.”

Most of Pakistan’s 160 million people are poor. But in recent years economists say government reforms have helped pump life into an economy that, in 1999, faced sanctions over the military’s nuclear weapons test. Foreign direct investment rose to nearly $4 billion in 2006, from less than a billion in 2003 – helping create new jobs.

The Karachi Stock Exchange rose around 50 percent last year, well above Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index’s 39 percent increase. Local investors drove stock market growth.

Tariq Choudhry, head of equity sales, at Invisor Securities in Karachi, says it is a tough job convincing foreign investors to put money into the market. But he says one draw is that Pakistan shares are still cheaper than similar stocks in the region.

“With volatility comes price discovery,” Choudhry said. “We have seen tremendous growth in the banking sector, we have seen Standard Chartered acquire a local bank, we see Barclays recently acquire a license, we have seen Temasek Holdings of Singapore acquire a local bank.”

Stock analysts say investing in Pakistan has its upside, if investors can bear the risks. Aside from the political uncertainty, Pakistan faces creeping inflation and a widening government deficit. Elections are scheduled for next month, and with a new government could come economic policy changes too.

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