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Sunday, May 4, 2025

Scotiabank official: T&T a great place to invest

by

20150712

The Caribbean re­mains a great place to in­vest, es­pe­cial­ly T&T, says Nick Chamie, chief in­vest­ment of­fi­cer for in­ter­na­tion­al wealth man­age­ment at Sco­tia­bank.

In an in­ter­view with the T&T Guardian at a ses­sion on Glob­al Mar­kets Out­look: A Road Map for Chal­leng­ing Times Chamie said: "Be­cause of the di­ver­si­ty of economies and mar­kets and com­pa­nies and is­suers of stocks and bonds in the Caribbean, cer­tain­ly there are a num­ber of very im­por­tant and im­pres­sive com­pa­nies to in­vest in and we are con­stant­ly eval­u­at­ing in­vest­ment op­por­tu­ni­ties in the re­gion for our broad­er glob­al in­vestors.

"I look at T&T and oth­er mar­kets around the world and ob­vi­ous­ly, re­gion­al­ly, from a fi­nan­cial mar­ket point of view in terms of the at­trac­tive­ness of stock and bond mar­kets alike. Gen­er­al­ly we find T&T to be a rel­a­tive­ly sta­ble and at­trac­tive mar­ket, with good growth op­por­tu­ni­ties and in the end, it tends to rank high­ly with­in the Caribbean."

Asked to com­ment on the Eu­rope Com­mis­sion' pub­lish­ing of a black­list of 30 coun­tries around the world de­scribed as the worst tax havens, 14 of which are Caribbean is­lands, Chamie said: "To be hon­est, I haven't looked at that re­port or haven't con­sid­ered that so I have no com­ment."Turn­ing his at­ten­tion to geopo­lit­i­cal and fi­nan­cial events in Eu­rope and Asia that could af­fect the re­gion, he said the fi­nan­cial cri­sis in Greece and the slow­down in the Chi­nese econ­o­my were two events to be con­cerned about.

If there was a dis­or­der­ly or dif­fi­cult end to Greece's cri­sis that re­sults in that coun­try's ex­it from the Eu­ro cur­ren­cy area, that is go­ing to act as a head wind to con­sumer and busi­ness con­fi­dence in Eu­rope, and even­tu­al­ly weigh neg­a­tive­ly on busi­ness ac­tiv­i­ty, he said. It will hurt trade and busi­ness in­vest­ment flows in­to many re­gions, in­clud­ing the Caribbean and Latin Amer­i­ca.

Chamie said in­di­rect­ly the re­gion will feel some re­ver­ber­a­tion if there was a dis­or­der­ly un­wind of Greece's prob­lems. How­ev­er, he does not be­lieve the sit­u­a­tion in Greece is sim­i­lar to the glob­al fi­nan­cial melt­down of 2008.Since 2010, he said, the rest of Eu­rope has es­tab­lished a num­ber of fire­walls to help mit­i­gate some of the spill-over risks. As a re­sult, the po­ten­tial for some kind of sys­temic event has been great­ly re­duced.

"To be hon­est I am not even to sure that back in 2010 when the Greek cri­sis re­al­ly first erupt­ed, if then it didn't rep­re­sent prop­er sys­temic risk for the world–not in the way 2008 did," Che said."Of course, T&T and the rest of the Caribbean re­gion re­lies on com­modi­ties. In terms of over­all glob­al eco­nom­ic growth, Chi­na is the sec­ond largest econ­o­my in the world and as a re­sult, its con­tin­ued slow­down will act to slow glob­al eco­nom­ic mo­men­tum.

"Of course, in terms of in­vest­ment, trade flows, specif­i­cal­ly in­vest­ment flows in­to the Latin Amer­i­can and Caribbean re­gion, Chi­na has been very promi­nent as a source of in­vest­ment in flows in­to the re­gion. So, as Chi­na's growth slows, it rep­re­sents a po­ten­tial risk to some of those in­vest­ment flows,"he said.

As eq­ui­ties con­tin­ue to de­cline, con­sid­er­ing that most of T&T's mu­tu­al funds were held in US eq­ui­ties and the gov­ern­ment held US se­cu­ri­ties, the mar­ket will re­main volatile.

"The world has to, on a reg­u­lar ba­sis, con­tend with a num­ber of con­tentious is­sues, but in the end, eq­ui­ties rep­re­sent an in­vest­ment in pro­duc­tive cap­i­tal. So in the long term, we still ex­pect that eq­ui­ty re­turns will con­tin­ue to be a rea­son­able op­tion for glob­al in­vestors. In the end, what you have in the US econ­o­my is the most sta­ble econ­o­my, one of the economies that has done the best com­ing out of the glob­al re­ces­sion in 2008-2009.

"So far, Eu­ro­pean eq­ui­ty mar­kets have lost some gains re­cent­ly in the con­text of the Greek cri­sis. We are still gen­er­al­ly op­ti­mistic on Eu­ro­pean eq­ui­ty mar­kets over the longer term, so it is im­por­tant to stick to longer term in­vest­ment prin­ci­ples and that has tra­di­tion­al­ly seen in­vestors through dif­fi­cult and un­cer­tain times," Chamie said.


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