Mexican Equities Offer the Possibility of Diversification

The launch of CME Group’s E-Mini S&P BMV IPC Index futures offers an opportune moment to examine the state of the Mexican economy and how the country’s equity market relates to currency, bond and stock markets in the United States.

Since 2000, U.S. economic expansion has outpaced Mexican growth with real GDP expanding 71% versus 49%, respectively (Figure 1).  Most of the disparity in growth emerged after 2017.

Source: Bloomberg Professional (MXGPQTR and GDP CHWG), CME Economic Research Calculations

Comparing the performance of their equity markets is tricky. What makes the comparison challenging is that one can view the relative performance of U.S. and Mexican equities from  different perspectives:

  1. Local currency returns

  2. Returns in the same currency (USD for example)

From a local currency return perspective, Mexico’s S&P BMV IPC Index has outperformed by a wide margin (Figure 2), but this ignores the fact that the Mexican peso (MXN) has declined by roughly 50% since 2000 (Figure 3).

Source: Bloomberg Professional (MEXBOL (TRA), <span>SPXT</span>, <span>XNDX</span>, <span>RUTTR</span>), CME Economic Research Calculations
Source: Bloomberg Professional (MEXBOL (TRA), SPXT, XNDX, RUTTR), CME Economic Research Calculations
Source: Bloomberg Professional (MXNUSD)
Source: Bloomberg Professional (MXNUSD)

When converted into the same currency, the overall returns since the year 2000 have been very similar, but the timing of the returns has been very different, with Mexico’s S&P BMV IPC Index outperforming from 2000 to 2012 while U.S. equity indices outperformed from 2012 onwards (Figure 4). This hints at the diversification potential of investing in Mexican equities alongside a portfolio of U.S. stocks.

Source: Bloomberg Professional (MEXBOL Converted with MXNUSD, <span>SPXT</span>, <span>XNDX</span>, <span>RUTTR</span>), CME Economic Research Calculations
Source: Bloomberg Professional (MEXBOL Converted with MXNUSD, SPXT, XNDX, RUTTR), CME Economic Research Calculations

Indeed, the correlation between Mexican and U.S. equities, while occasionally as high as +0.8 from 2007 to 2012, has been ranging from +0.2 to +0.6 on a one-year rolling basis for the past dozen years (Figure 6). Part of this may be a reflection of the fact that Mexico’s underlying sector composition is very different from U.S. indices (Table 1).

Sector

S&P BMV IPC

S&P 500

Consumer Staples

29.92%

5.21%

Materials

23.95%

1.89%

Financials

17.64%

13.97%

Industrials

14.51%

8.46%

Communications Services

10.44%

10.01%

Real Estate

1.53%

2.00%

Consumer Discretionary

1.49%

10.54%

Health Care

0.53%

9.08%

Information Technology

0%

33.44%

Energy

0%

3.03%

Utilties

0%

2.36%

Source: Bloomerg Professional IMAP

Mexico has a much higher weighting to consumer staples and materials stocks, a much lower weighting to consumer discretionary and no weighting at all to information technology stocks – the S&P 500’s biggest sector – or to energy or utility stocks. Despite the S&P BMV IPC Index’s high weighting to consumer staples and materials stocks, its correlation with the S&P 500 sectors has not been particularly high during the past year either (Figure 6), suggesting strong diversification potential from S&P 500 E-Mini Select Sector Futures as well.

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