By Wayne Arnold

Sometimes, global investing is just like real estate: The only thing that matters is location, location, and location.

Look at Vietnam. Suddenly, it's dawned on just about everyone that this country with unrivaled sunrise views over the South China Sea can not only back out of its deepwater naval base at Cam Ranh Bay onto one of the world's busiest trade routes, but that its veranda overlooks a lovely undersea garden of oil and gas deposits.

It is resource-rich, one of the world's largest exporters of rice and pepper and shrimp. Do you like instant coffee? Then you'll love Vietnam's robusta beans -- it's the world's biggest exporter. Did we mention the schools? Well, 94% of Vietnam's 90 million people are literate, yet earn less than $2,000 a year on average -- a feature that helps explain why high-tech companies from Canon and Intel to Samsung Electronics have invested in manufacturing pieds-a-terre there.

No wonder some of the world's biggest powers are beating a path to Hanoi's door. The United States, which you may remember fought for a decade to keep the Communists from taking over, earlier this month lifted a ban on selling them weapons - the better to fend off incursions by its larger neighbor China, which claims the entire South China Sea.

China, which also lost a war against Vietnam, sent its top diplomat to Hanoi this week to patch things up after a summer spat when China's state-owned oil company left one of its oil rigs in waters that Vietnam considers its front yard. That led to a maritime standoff that touched off riots at Chinese factories in Vietnam that killed at least four people.

Vietnam has meanwhile invited India's state-run Oil & Natural Gas Corp. (ticker: ONGC.IN) to explore for oil and gas in the disputed waters. Indian president Pranab Mukherjee visited Vietnam last month. This week Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung visited Delhi and India's news media is reporting Vietnam will sign a deal with India to jointly explore more of the South China Sea.

Global portfolio investors are also taking renewed notice of Vietnam. The Market Vectors Vietnam Exchange-Traded Fund (VNM) is up 10% this year, while Ho Chi Minh's stock index has climbed 15.4%. The government's 10-year domestic borrowing costs have dropped from 9.8% to 6.3% this year.

Since September, when global markets began to gyrate, however, investors seem to be of two minds about Vietnam. While they're increasingly willing to lend Hanoi more money for less, Vietnam's stocks have fallen about 8%.

This makes little sense considering that most of the risk in Vietnam lies, as in most old homes, in interior foundations, not its external facade. True, Vietnam has managed to reverse a once-persistent current account deficit, which has helped stabilize its currency. And inflation is slowing. But as the International Monetary Fund noted in its annual report on Vietnam this month, budget deficits and public debt are rising as Hanoi boosts borrowing from its citizenry to finance increased outlays and tax cuts. Reform of its inefficient state-owned enterprises and rickety banks, meanwhile, has suffered delays typical of any aggravating home renovation. Corruption is high; infrastructure poor.

The divergence among investors, therefore, may have more to do with the global retreat from risk than anything to do with Vietnam. As investors brace for an increase in U.S. interest rates, they've been pulling out of emerging market stocks and moving into U.S. Treasuries and, to a lesser extent, higher-yielding emerging market bonds.

That may provide investors who still have a stomach for emerging-market equities with an opportunity to get in on the ground floor of Vietnam's expanding role in Asia's export supply chain. While stocks in Saigon are trading at roughly 14 times projected earnings, which is high relative to their five-year average, they pay an average 3.89% dividend.

But as HSBC economist Izumi Devalier notes in her report this week on Asian trade patterns, Vietnam is stepping in to take over some of the more labor-intensive manufacturing where China is no longer competitive. Vietnam also stands to benefit from lower tariffs under the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership free-trade agreement. The IMF expects Vietnam's economic growth to accelerate from 5.4% last year to 5.5% this year, and then rise to 5.6% next year, and Trans-Pacific Partnership hopes are already helping to boost foreign direct investment.

Recovering global demand for Asian exports in recent months means Vietnam will likely benefit and its own manufactured exports, which are already growing at double-digits, will pick up more speed. Mobile phones, for example, have surpassed garments, footwear and crude oil as Vietnam's top export.

And higher exports in a developing country like Vietnam are likely to have a much broader impact on domestic spending than in more advanced nations. Private-sector and household debt in Vietnam remain relatively low. That gives Vietnam's consumers and companies a lot more space to redecorate.

Comments? E-mail us at wayne.arnold@barrons.com

Comments? E-mail us at asiaeditors@barrons.com

 
 
 

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