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Four-fifths of EM funds still trapped in Russian stocks - research

Published 05/09/2022, 01:13 AM
Updated 05/09/2022, 01:27 AM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A picture illustration shows Russian rouble banknotes of various denominations on a table in Warsaw, Poland, January 22, 2016. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel

LONDON (Reuters) - Fewer than a fifth of actively managed emerging market equity funds have cut their exposure to Russian stocks to zero, data from Copley Fund Research shows, with a number of funds unable to sell out.

Russia has been severed from global financial markets, and its stocks and bonds ejected from indexes after Western nations imposed sweeping sanctions to punish Moscow for its Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine.

Sanctions alongside Russian counter-measures, including capital controls, have made the country's financial markets broadly inaccessible for foreign investors.

Latest fund filing data covering 253 funds with $450 billion assets under management showed 45 funds closed out of all Russia positions between end-2021 and end-April, the Copley research found.

"Many funds are holding positions that they can't get out of so will remain invested for a while," said Steven Holden at Copley.

Weightings have also fallen rapidly, with Russia now making up just under 2% of average fund weights compared to 4.5% in January.

Russia's current weighting was artificially high due to calculations still based on last trading prices from before the war for some stocks such as Sberbank, Holden said.

"Russia is falling down the ranks and will drift into insignificance over the course of the year," he added.

Russia weightings in active EM equity funds https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/klvyklrklvg/Russia%20weightins%20end-April.PNG

Russian stocks had been widely held by emerging market asset managers, especially after the Moscow Exchange launched a dollar-denominated index in 1995.

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Among the investment vehicles that have totally exited Russia are funds by Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS), Lazard (NYSE:LAZ) Asset Management, Templeton and Van Eck, the data showed.

Funds cutting Russia exposure https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/xmvjoywodpr/Funds%20cutting%20Russia%20exposure.PNG

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