By Carla Mozee
Equities across Latin America stumbled Monday, opening the week
hurt by persistent fears about debt troubles in the euro zone.
Brazil's Bovespa paced the decline with a 2.2% drop to 62,011,
pushing the index further into negative territory for the year for
a loss of more than 9%. At the same time last year, the index
tracking Latin America's largest stock market was up 31%.
Argentina's Merval fell 2.5% on Monday. Mexico's IPC lost 1.4%
and Chile's IPSA fell 0.6%.
Among exchange-traded funds, the iShares MSCI Brazil Index Fund
(EWZ) fell 2.7%. The iShares MSCI Mexico Index Fund (EWW) lost 2.2%
and the iShares Chile Investable Market Index (ECH) gave up
2.1%.
The regional equity markets were headed for their fourth
consecutive loss as investors remained concerned that fiscal
deterioration in Europe will hamper global economic recovery
efforts. Those fears have prompted investors to flock to the
perceived safety of the U.S. dollar, pushing the euro zone's
currency to multimonth lows. Latin American currencies have also
declined against the dollar in recent sessions.
The dollar index (DXY) recently rose 0.3%.
"When U.S. investors buy foreign stocks, mutual funds or ETFs,
their returns suffer when overseas currencies fall against the U.S.
dollar," wrote Alec Young, international equity strategist at
S&P Equity Research Services in a note to clients Monday. "As
sovereign credit risk has pressured the euro and other foreign
currencies vs. the greenback, negative currency translation has
significantly detracted from dollar-denominated foreign equity
returns."
In 2009, the weak dollar helped bolster a strong performance
among international assets, Young wrote.
But Brazil's Finance Minister Henrique Meirelles reportedly said
Monday that the country is ready to weather any possible contagion
from the fiscal crisis in Europe, noting that it has a high level
of foreign-exchange reserves and that it will be prepared to
provide liquidity if credit conditions tighten.
In Sao Paulo trading, industrial, steel, finance, home building
and utility stocks led the decline in Sao Paulo. Shares of chemical
products producer Braskem (BAK) were the worst price performers as
they fell 7.6%. The company late last week swung to a quarterly off
of 123 million reals, hurt in part by a decline in Brazil's
currency against the greenback.
Market heavyweight Vale (RIO) lost 2.8% and stock in oil giant
Petrobras (PBR) fell 1.4%, giving up earlier advances.
Late Friday, Petrobras posted a jump in first-quarter earnings
to 7.73 billion reals ($4.25 billion) from 6.29 billion reals in
the year-ago period. The company cited higher oil prices and
increased output of crude as factors that contributed to the
earnings increase. Revenue rose 18% to 50.4 billion reals from 42.6
billion reals.
On Wall Street, the S&P 500 Index (SPX) fell 1.4% and the
Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) slid 144 points, or 1.4%, to
10,475.
While investors have been focused on European sovereign debt
problems, the first-quarter earnings season in Latin America has
nearly reached an end, and actual earnings from 70% of MSCI Latin
America Index constituents that have already reported "are coming
in slightly disappointing," said broker Deutsche Bank in a report
to clients Monday.
Of the companies that have reported, 56% have missed consensus
estimates for earnings, and 52% have missed revenue estimates,
wrote Frederick Searby, an equity strategist covering Latin America
at Deutsche Bank.
Meanwhile, more than 80% of S&P 500 companies that have
reported as of last week have beaten consensus estimates, and
nearly 70% of Stoxx Europe 600 Index constituents have posted
better-than-expected per-share results.
"However, these results must be seen in light of the fact that
Latin America led the world in earnings revisions last year and
year-to-date, setting the bar quite high," wrote Searby.