Which Emerging Markets Have the Most Leveraged Stocks? (Bloomberg)

BloombergView columnist Mark Whitehouse has come up with a ranking of which emerging markets have companies with the most leverage and hence, the most risk. As he explained, there are some caveats and difficulties with coming up with a calculation for individual emerging markets:

National differences in accounting standards and industry concentrations, for example, will inevitably affect the results. That said, it’s still worth taking a look. To that end, I queried the Bloomberg terminal for publicly traded nonfinancial companies in 10 large emerging-market economies (setting a minimum threshold of $300 million in assets). I then calculated the aggregate corporate leverage for each country.

Brazil ended up coming out on top as its companies had about $1.16 in debt for each dollar in equity. Brazil was followed closely by India with $1.14 while China and Turkey were in the middle with more than 80 cents for each dollar in equity. Russia was near the bottom at just 54 cents as Western sanctions have complicated borrowing for Russian companies.

EmergingMarketSkeptic.com - Emerging Markets with the Most Leveraged CompaniesHowever and when cash is taken into account, the “net” debt loads of corporate China and Turkey look smaller:

EmergingMarketSkeptic.com - Emerging Markets with the Most Net Leveraged CompaniesTo read the whole article, The Riskiest Emerging Markets, go to the website of BloombergView.

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