Financier Mobius Bets On 50-Year Rally In Indian Stocks As China Slows

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Mobius Emerging Markets Fund has a combined 45% of its portfolio allocated to India and Taiwan.Veteran investor Mark Mobius has allocated
almost half of his emerging-markets fund to India and Taiwan to help offset a slide in China shares that has dragged down returns from
developing nations as a whole."India is on a 50-year rally," even if there are short bouts of bear markets, Mobius said in an interview on
Bloomberg Television
"India is maybe where China used to be 10 years ago," he said, adding the government policies of unifying rules across states will help the
country in the long run.Mobius' bullish view on India clashes with those of analysts at Morgan Stanley and Nomura Holdings Inc., who have
downgraded the stock market after the benchmark S-P BSE Sensex Index more than doubled from a March 2020 low.Emerging-market equities have
trailed behind their developed-nation peers this year, held back by losses in China as the government has roiled markets with a widespread
regulatory crackdown."People say emerging-markets look bad because China is dragging down the index, but they have to look at other areas
such as India that are going up," said Mobius, who founded Mobius Capital Partners LLP after a career at Franklin Templeton Investments.The
Mobius Emerging Markets Fund has a combined 45% of its portfolio allocated to India and Taiwan, with tech hardware and software the biggest
holdings in these markets
Indian software services provider Persistent Systems Ltd
and eMemory Technology Inc., a Taiwanese chip technology provider, were among its biggest stakes as of end-September
The stocks have both more than doubled this year.That said, the decline in Chinese equities has presented some opportunities, Mobius
said."The government has begun to regulate better, trying to avoid monopolies," he said
"We are looking at small and medium-sized companies that will benefit from these changes where the government wants a more level playing
field."(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by TheIndianSubcontinent staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)