Motley Fool Money - Russia/China: What's Next?
Episode Date: March 17, 2022Russia's stock market was supposed to open this week. Even if you don't own Russian stocks directly, you may own them through global funds or ETFs. (0:20) Bill Mann discusses: - How Russia's market... remained closed - Potential for Russia to default on its debt - The one thing every U.S. investor should do if they have exposure to Russian stocks - Chinese stocks suddenly rebounding on comments from the central government - Why he believes the turnaround is a "yellow flag" for investors Stocks discussed: YNDX, BABA, TCEHY, JD, BIDU Host: Chris Hill Guests: Bill Mann Engineer: Tim Sparks Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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We've got a recommended course of action for anyone with exposure to the Russian stock market,
and we've got a few thoughts on the latest turn of investing related events in China.
Motley Full Money starts now.
I'm Chris Hill, joined by Motley Full Senior analyst Bill Mann.
Happy St. Patrick's Day.
Thank you, Chris.
Can I just say from the outset that Rage Against the Machine was not specific about the type of
machine they were so angry at, but I'm pretty sure it was a printer.
That's what my day's been.
I think I know I can identify with that, and I think some of the dozens of listeners can identify
with raging against.
I was trying to print one page, and I ended up printing 64 without noticing.
So I need to finance my new set of ink.
In the great scheme of things, not that big of a deal, but it's my cross-to-bear at the moment.
Well, let's get to a much bigger deal and talk about Russia's economy.
And we'll start with the stock market, because Russia's stock market was supposed to open this week.
and best I can tell, did not. We will get to the overall economy and the potential for Russia
defaulting on its debt in a little bit, but let's talk stocks first. What happened with the stock
market and where are we now? So the Russian Central Bank closed their stock market once Western
sanctions were placed on Russia, which was, you don't want to give them too much credit. It was
probably the right thing to do. And then on Saturday, they decided we're not going to open up
the market just yet. They decided to keep the market closed for another week. Now, it's important
to note that this wasn't an exchange decision. This was made by the central bank, which is not
really the type of meddling that you would see in the U.S., for example. The Federal Reserve
does not have much power to tell the New York Stock Exchange or the NASDAQ, hey, hit the showers,
take a day off. We'll see you tomorrow. Those types of things are
done on much more independent basis. But Russia is in a lot of ways a centrally managed economy.
I don't own any Russian stocks directly. I'm guessing a good number of people listening don't
either. Although it is possible, probably more possible, that people might own through global
funds that they own or ETFs. How worried should investors be about their exposure to the
to Russian stocks right now?
I think at this point, there's no real reason to worry because the damage has been done.
Why worry now?
Like, it's finished.
I actually have the pleasure said in air quotes of owning two Russian stocks, like individually.
And that's not been a whole lot of fun.
I think that what ultimately will happen, there's a lot of talk about having the Russian
stocks removed from the emerging.
and developing market indices. And that's going to be, that'll be painful because these
indices and the funds that track them will do that all at once. Now, I am as a veteran value
investor. I love the thought of going in and finding companies and areas that everybody else is
selling. I don't think this is one of those situations. I think, you know, I think that
Russia is in for a world of hurt for a very long time. It will be a long, long time before Russia is treated
as a country in the normal sense as far as the financial markets go. So this is not an area to wade
into. Eventually, the Russian stock market will open back up. I'm seeing now a lot of funds do
something called fair valuing. And so, for companies like Yandex, which last traded at 18
bucks in the U.S., it's being fair valued at somewhere about $8 by these funds. So, that feels
about right to me.
There's a lot of talk now of the potential for Russian assets being frozen.
So you can-
Or of them? What's left?
So what is the ripple effect from that? Because you know, we've been talking about the Russian
stock market. And look, if you're an investor in Russia, the world of hurt that you referred
to is hitting your investment account in very real ways that could last for a long time. In
terms of ripple effects for other countries, what, if any, exist in terms of Russian assets
being frozen? Well, I think that, you know, obviously, when you talk about Russian assets being
frozen, they are frozen somewhere. For example, in the United Kingdom has been a prime repository
for assets that have left Russia. The UK banking system has a huge amount of Russian assets.
You also look at countries like China. I think in any, if you look back over the last couple of weeks,
One thing that has happened is that raw material and commodity prices have spiked, not just oil and
gas, but also things like nickel, but also the U.S. dollar has spiked against almost every
other currency in the world. And that is really, really, really troubling for countries, again, like
China, that are effectively short those commodities. So, yeah, when you freeze a market like Russia's,
you are not only creating pressure on Russia, you're creating pressure on anybody who has exposure to them.
And so we've seen it in the nickel market. We've seen it in the oil and gas market.
I think we're going to see it in other places, too.
It's a great point because I think that for a lot of people watching the military situation play out in Ukraine,
it is natural to want that to end as peacefully and as quickly as possible.
I understand the thinking behind, we need to punish Russia.
Let's issue some sanction.
Let's do what we can.
But at some point, it's not just punishing Russian billionaires.
It hits on the business level that, as you said, there are raw materials coming out of Russia
that a lot of businesses, including businesses in the United States of America, that they rely on.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
Obviously, there's been a lot of pressure that's put on the Russian oligarchs.
It's a very attractive way to go after the power structure in Russia.
I don't know how effective that actually is because of the way that Vladimir Putin has
allowed them to retain their wealth by specifically staying out of the political game.
So, yeah, at some point, and I know this isn't an attractive thing to say,
an off-ramp might be something that is going to help the situation for everyone going down the road,
as opposed to some form of mutually assured financial destruction.
The last time Russia defaulted on their debt, I believe was 1998.
And while it did not cause a worldwide financial panic, it did send some ripples through other markets.
If I'm reading stuff correctly, and I like to think that I am,
there is a 30-day grace period that kicks in.
So if they can't make the payment on their debt, they have till mid-April to make good on
that, assuming that is the case and the grace period kicks in, then I guess the clock
starts ticking until maybe April 15th.
But I guess my question is, as an investor, how worried are you about Russia defaulting
on their debt. So, actually, a better allegory to think about Russian debt default in this case
is actually 1917 than 1998, because in 1998, I wasn't around in 1917. Nor was I. Nor was I.
So let's just all put a pin in the fact that this has received wisdom. In 1998, Russia defaulted
on its domestic, its ruble-denominated debt. In this case, we're talking about $150 billion,
$117 and I think $117 million in dollar denominated debt.
That's what they have to pay.
And they have to pay it with an absolutely defenestrated ruble at this point.
So the question is not just can they pay, but what are they going to pay with?
Because they can't pay in rubles.
They are supposed to pay in dollars.
So that's that's the big question.
And again, when you talk about, now about 80% of this debt is also,
held by Russians. So, once again, there's your pain threshold. But 20% of it is held by pension funds.
It's held by banks. It's held as collateral. It's held on their balance sheet. So, yeah, there are
banks in Austria, for example, and banks in the UK that have some really uncomfortable exposure
and are really hoping to see those payments come through because nobody wants to see that clock start ticking.
Realistically, and to the extent that there is a relatively simple explanation for this,
what needs to happen between now and mid-April for the rubble to rebound, for Russia to be
able to finance this debt in a way that makes maybe not everybody happy, but satisfied
enough?
Well, since we're talking about debt instruments, the people who own the debt have to be
made happy. This isn't a compromise situation. You have either satisfied your debt or you are in breach.
So it is kind of as simple as that. A lot of your question is a little bit above our pay grades because
I don't know what's going to happen from here. But essentially, these debts have to be paid in full
under the terms under which the debt was underwritten or Russia and a bunch of Russian companies are
going to be in default. And that will be, as they say, those will be interesting times.
Before we move on, what are you watching now? Other than an end to the conflict in Ukraine,
from an economic standpoint, what are you watching to give you a sense of where this story
goes next? You know what? I think it's really it. How is the conflict going? Because when you're
talking about where does the pressure on Vladimir Putin come from?
from, it's from the conflict because the other power center in Russia is the military.
And they, if the news is to be believed, are having their heads handed to them.
And ultimately, ultimately, it comes down to that.
It comes down to the negotiations, which we see pop up from time to time.
But ultimately, that's it.
How's it going there?
Because that's the big, that's the big pressure.
That's the big gamble that he has taken.
And that's going to be the ultimate arbiter of how quickly and under what conditions the world moves
on to its next phase.
All right. Before I let you go, I want to circle back to the conversation we had on Tuesday
because we talked about Chinese stocks in the U.S. Alibaba, Tencent, J.D.com, Bydo, which at that
point, we're all down 25 percent at least in the matter of just a few days. For very valid reasons,
The SEC was threatening to delist some stocks. Wall Street firms were downgrading pretty much
every Chinese stock out there. And you'd made the comment at the time that the Chinese government
was basically okay with this because they prefer their companies to list in Shanghai and Hong Kong.
I'm wondering if regulators in the United States and China were actually listening to our
episode on Tuesday because in the last 36 hours, those stocks have bounced back up on
the news reports that the US and Chinese regulators are working on a plan to cooperate. China
says it will support Chinese companies having IPOs abroad. We've seen the stocks that I mentioned
before bounce back up. And I'm wondering what you make of, in particular, the comments that
have been made public from, I think it's the vice premier in China.
So I want to take a little bit of a step back because I want to put some frame around what we're talking about here.
Because, yes, that was pretty spectacular timing for us to have that conversation about Russia being a manipulated market and one that was dominated by the interests of the state.
And for the state interest only a few hours later for them to say, well, yeah, we're going to do more than you thought we were going to do.
That still means that the market is manipulated. It was just manipulated.
in a little bit of a different way than it had been over the previous, I don't know,
call it 18 months. So, in the last seven years, the U.S. stock market as measured by the NASDAQ is up by
177 percent. Chris Hill, how much is the Chinese stock market up over the last seven years?
I'm going to take the under. Minus 3%. Wow. I was just thinking under 177
percent. Minus three percent. Cumulative, right? You can annualize that, but it comes out to your money has,
your money has sat absolutely, positively. All you've had is opportunity costs go out the door.
You know, I think that the thing that keep in mind, you know, is that when they're talking about
delisting Chinese stocks in the U.S. market, it doesn't necessarily mean, and it does not mean
at all, that they're going to be delisted and you don't own anything anymore. It just means that
they're going to be much more difficult to trade. Certain brokers in the U.S. have access to the Hong Kong
market, which is the most likely location they would go. And I think that the Chinese government was
pretty smart to come out and say, look, it's not going to be as bad as all this. But for Americans
who do not have access to a market that trades in Hong Kong, that doesn't.
not mean that they're not going to end up having some difficulty trading these stocks.
And the tension that we talked about the other day, the fact that the Chinese law does
not allow its auditors to be accountable to outside to foreign regulators.
That hasn't changed.
And until that changes, I would say that at best, there is a yellow light over all of the
Chinese ADRs that are listening.
in the United States. For people who have either directly in the stock itself or through a
mutual fund or ETF, is this one of those situations where you want to contact whichever brokerage
you have your money with and say, hey, let me run a scenario by you. Let's just say this happens.
What are my options? It seems like one of those good times. I absolutely would and why.
And I would say that the brokers that in my experience are most prepared to handle this are
Fidelity, Schwab, and interactive brokers.
If it's a mutual fund you're talking about, don't worry at all.
The mutual funds have plenty of ability to trade overseas.
If you aren't with one of those brokers, it is, in fact, worth a call.
And you're just scenario planning with them.
And I wish that we could give an omnibus answer here.
We can't because every broker,
has a little bit of a different access, a little bit of a different rules.
I would say, call them up, ask for the International Desk, and just ask, what is going to happen
if the Chinese ADRs are delisted with my funds in this brokerage and get an answer for them?
I think that that's good advice.
Great idea that you came up with.
You and I were chatting earlier.
I mentioned, among other things, I think it's always helpful for particularly U.S.
investors to remember, the speed with which the Chinese government moves is much, much faster
than the speed with which the United States government moves. The SEC regulations that I referred
to earlier, that was something that took years to enact into law. That took then, I believe,
another 18 months of the SEC working with these companies. And before they finally got to the
point where they said, hey, it's official warning time as opposed to...
the Chinese government in a single statement says, oh, okay, we'll just make this work.
Yeah. So I have a friend who is an old Chinese hand and he's lived in China for four decades now.
And I asked him one time, what was the thing that he still did not understand about China?
And he said, it is still completely opaque how decisions get made at almost every level.
But here's what's true about China. They go through the process every five years of building a five-year plan.
And it's around a central conflict. And there is a whole lot of discussion about what that struggle is.
But once that struggle is identified, then the decisions that come after, it seem to be made very quickly.
They are either in support of that central struggle, or they are, they are, they are either in support of that central struggle,
or they are in a little bit of conflict with the central struggle.
So, once you've got that, once you've got that position defined,
decisions that come after that can be made pretty quickly.
It is also, I guess you could say nice, not to have to ask anybody else
what their opinion is about the topic.
You know, maybe that's, you know, maybe that's, maybe I'm glorifying, you know,
an autocratic system a little too much.
But it is, it is the case.
You know, newsflash, Bill Mann hates democracy.
See, no, no, no, no. But there is certainly, if you don't have to ask the populace what their
opinion is, decisions can be made much, much faster.
Really appreciate you talking through all this. Thanks for being here.
Thanks, Chris.
As always, people on the program may have interests in the stocks they talk about,
and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against them.
But don't buy yourself stocks based solely on what you hear.
I'm Chris Hill. Thanks for listening. We'll see you tomorrow.
Thank you.
