Tech is so 2017.
With at least $323 billion in infrastructure spending in the pipeline in Southeast Asia and potentially more expected over the next few years, 2018 could well shape up as the year of builders’ stocks from Indonesia to the Philippines that have been the laggards in a broader market rally this year.
Governments are boosting spending on everything—from airports to high-speed rails and ports—to increase connectivity and boost economic growth in what promises to be a boon for the region’s construction companies. In one of the more ambitious programs in the region, President Duterte has earmarked an unprecedented $180 billion for infrastructure to keep driving one of the world’s best-performing economies over coming years. Malaysia and Thailand are also ramping up allocations to public works ahead of general elections in 2018.
“Infrastructure has been under invested, whether it’s clear water, clean air, energy, roads, ports, railways, education, health care—so there are tons of opportunities,” said Ashish Goyal, head of emerging markets equities at NN Investment Partners (S) Ltd., which manages $288 billion in assets. The firm owns stakes in Indonesian construction stocks. He said investors should watch for the pace of execution in the various countries.
UBS Group AG expects “changes in government policy and delivery on infrastructure” to be among the region’s biggest themes for 2018, as growth in global trade fades, analysts, including Ian Gisbourne, wrote in a report dated November 28.
Construction stocks on the MSCI Asean Index have risen an average of about 7.4 percent this year in dollar terms, about one-third the gain of the overall gauge, which is set for its best performance in seven years. Technology shares have provided the biggest boost to the Southeast Asian index this year, as global demand for electronics returned.
Some builders are already rallying in anticipation of the rewards they will reap from the spike in infrastructure outlays. Indonesian cement supplier PT Indocement Tunggal Prakarsa soared as much as 54 percent earlier this year, as investors expect it to benefit from a surge in demand as the nation builds toll roads, ports and power plants. Manila-based EEI Corp. has surged 73 percent, leading a rally in Philippine construction stocks, as it begins work on the nation’s $1.6-billion, 44-kilometer (27-mile) mass-railway project.
Infrastructure development and more Chinese investments into the Philippines could support stocks with net-asset value of the nation’s developers expanding by as much as 12 percent over the next three years, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. analysts, including Paul Lian, wrote in a report dated December 7.
Companies that provide services for construction projects, such as improving management efficiency or sustainability, may also capitalize on the spending boom on public works, Felix Lam, a portfolio manager at BNP Paribas SA’s asset management arm, said by phone.
Even so, the Southeast Asian market as a whole might continue to underperform, compared to “its larger, more liquid and faster-growing North Asia and India counterparts,” Goldman Sachs Group Inc. analysts, including Timothy Moe, wrote in a November report. And Credit Suisse Group AG has maintained its underweight rating on the region for 2018.
Still, Morgan Stanley sees investor attention back on the Asean region, as markets are expected to give returns of as much as 10 percent next year, more than three times what’s seen for emerging markets. Here is a breakdown of what countries are planning and what investors are saying about Southeast Asia’s infrastructure spending spree:
The Philippines
The government has allocated about P1 trillion ($20 billion) to infrastructure in the 2018 budget, as part of Duterte’s $180-billion infrastructure program over a six-year period to build a network of railroads and highways across the archipelago.
The tax-reform program will help fund infrastructure projects.
Construction and infrastructure-related stocks will outperform in 2018, according to Noel Reyes, who helps manage $1 billion as chief investment officer at Security Bank Corp. The tax-reform bill is awaiting Congress approval and is among the first of five tax packages proposed by Duterte to raise taxes to pay for infrastructure projects. The infrastructure program includes 70 projects from railways, airports, roads and bridges, cities, ports to mass transit during Duterte’s six-year term as president.
Companies involved in construction and infrastructure are: Metro Pacific Investments Corp., Megawide Construction Corp., Ayala Corp. and EEI Corp., among others.
Indonesia
Indonesia’s Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati has announced more than 240 infrastructure projects.
The country needs 931 trillion rupiah ($69 billion) from 2015 to 2019 for infrastructure spending. It has allocated only 528 trillion rupiah over the period, according to Public Works and Public Housing Ministry.
Concerns about funding availability and financing risks among Indonesian infrastructure companies have depressed construction stocks this year. Shares of PT Waskita Karya, the country’s biggest listed builder, have dropped 27 percent in 2017, even as the Jakarta Composite Index hit a record high in November.
Its biggest construction companies are: PT Jasa Marga, PT PP Persero and PT Waskita Beton.
Malaysia
Malaysia has allocated 210 billion ringgit ($51.6 billion) for projects in the 2018 budget, of which 73 percent will go to rail and public transport.
About 55 billion ringgit was allocated to East Coast Rail Link, 50 billion to 60 billion ringgit given to Kuala Lumpur-Singapore
High Speed Rail and 40 billion ringgit to phase 3 of the mass rapid transit system.
Rail, affordable housing, roads and water infrastructure are major segments that will benefit from the government’s spending next year, Sharizan Rosely, an analyst at CIMB wrote in a report dated October 30. The general election is due by August 2018.
Its biggest construction companies are: Gamuda Bhd., IJM Corp. Bhd., Sunway Construction Group Bhd. and Malaysian Resources Corp. Bhd.
Thailand
The Thai government has pledged 1.5 trillion baht ($46 billion) over the next five years to boost growth via infrastructure spending to develop its three eastern provinces as the Eastern Economic Corridor.
Infrastructure spending is to remain a key driver for the economy and new development projects like EEC, said Orsen Karnburisudthi, Bangkok-based senior investment manager at Aberdeen Asset Management Co.
EEC envisions to turn the provinces into hubs for technological manufacturing and services with strong connectivity by land, sea and air with help of state and private funding, as well as foreign direct investment.
Elections to be key upside for economic growth and business sentiment, Aberdeen said. Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-Ocha said in October a vote will be held in November 2018. Banks will see earnings improve, as economic growth boosts loan growth and reduces bad loan provisions, while shopping mall operators and retailers can benefit from consumption recovery, Orsen said.
Its biggest construction players are: Italian-Thai Development Pcl., CH. Karnchang Pcl., Unique Engineering & Construction Pcl., Sino-Thai Engineering & Construction Pcl.; EEC beneficiaries: Amata Corp. and WHA Corp.
Vietnam
Vietnam has allocated 150 trillion dong ($6.6 billion) for infrastructure development from 2016 to 2020, and still needs $480 billion to fund investments by 2020, according to the Ministry of Planning and Investment.
Key infrastructure projects include a $13-billion, 1,800-kilometer expressway from Ha Noi in the north to Ho Chi Minh City in the south, the nation’s largest-ever road project. Its biggest infrastructure players are: Songda Urban, Ho Chi Minh City Infrastructure, Coteccons Construction, Ha Do JSC and Song Da No. 9 JSC.
Singapore
As the only developed market in Southeast Asia, Singapore is less likely to see government expenditure in infrastructure on the same scale as its neighbors.
While some key projects for 2018 include a new airport terminal at Changi
Airport, mega shipping port and the Kuala Lumpur-Singapore high-speed rail, the country’s stock market is more likely to benefit from a recovery in the property sector and overall economy. DBS Group Holdings Ltd. sees property prices recovering 3 percent to 5 percent annually over the next two years, buoying small to mid-cap construction-related and real-estate stocks, such as Chip Eng Seng Corp. and APAC Realty Ltd., analysts, including Ling Lee Keng, wrote in a note dated December 5.
Singapore’s economic recovery is also seen broadening out from the manufacturing industry in 2018 to the services sector, which accounts for about two-thirds of GDP.