Global market players are closely watching the uprising in Egypt to see if events there have an impact on their investments in stocks, corporate bonds and sovereign debt.
The Van Eck MarketVectors Egypt Index ETF (EGPT) moved up 1% on Friday to trade near $18. Earlier this week, EPFR Global said emerging-stock stock fund outflows reached their highest level in three years, hitting more than $7 billion in the week ended Wednesday. According to Lipper data released Thursday, foreign stock funds, both ETFs and mutual funds, had about $4 billion in outflows for the week.
So far, though, the uprising's most obvious financial effect has been on Egypt itself. The Egyptian economy has lost at least $3.1 billion as a result of the political crisis in the country, at a cost of $310 million per day, The Associated Press reported Friday as tens of thousands of protesters massed in downtown Cairo demanding the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak.
Citing a Credit Agricole report, the AP said the French investment bank has revised down its forecast for 2011 GDP growth to 3.7% from 5.3% and the Egyptian pound could see a depreciation of up to 20%.
"The economy is at the heart of Egypt's problems," John Sfakianakis, chief economist at the Riyadh-based Banque Saudi Fransi-Credit Agricole Group, said in the report.
Plenty of other market watchers are weighing in on the situation, publishing analyst notes and adjusting asset allocations to calm investor fears. Here is a roundup of what advisors, economists and portfolio managers are saying about Egypt:
PIMCO CEO and co-CIO Mohammed El-Erian: "The Egypt of tomorrow will not be the Egypt of eight days ago. The genie is out of the bottle … People have been empowered," El-Erian told Bloomberg on Tuesday about the situation in Egypt. El-Erian, who speaks Arabic and is the son of an Egyptian diplomat, described the country — now in its second week of political protests — as "certainly [moving] on to something new." Still, "Egypt is not defenseless in terms of its economy," El-Erian said. "It's financially very strong." The country's economy, he noted, is free of external debt and has some $35 billion in reserves.