BUDAPEST/WARSAW (Reuters) - Portfolio specialist Dustin Blodgett correctly projected last year that Warsaw's stock exchange would be one of the best equity market bets in the world in 2017: he now says it should keep rising this year as well.
Last year, among MSCI's country indexes, Poland came top among all emerging markets, rising 52.25 percent in dollar terms, with the zloty's firming accounting for 17 percent of that.In comparison, emerging markets excluding China gained 28.3 percent and the United States itself some 19.5 percent.Analysts and fund managers reckon the Warsaw bourse can repeat at least some of this in 2018. Valuations remain low, economic fundamentals are supportive, and Warsaw's political battles with Brussels are mostly ignored by investors.So Poland is again in the top five in value of the 34 countries ranked by Blodgett's company, California-based Accuvest Global Advisors."Poland has great momentum leading into this year and still has cheap valuations," he said. "That could lead to another great year."In its favor, Poland is the biggest of the European Union's fast-growing eastern emerging economies. The local exchange's turnover is also by far the highest in the region. The global stocks rally may lose momentum, but the Warsaw Stock Exchange is still expected to post strong gains, even though the zloty is unlikely to repeat last year's surge against the dollar."(A stock index) increase at the level of 10-12 percent is still possible," said Ryszard Rusak, Investment Director for Equities at Union Investment TFI in Warsaw.The median estimate in a Reuters survey of nine analysts projected a 7.6 percent zloty-denominated gain in the main index <.wig20> this year. POLITICS SHUNNED AS ECONOMY ROARS The market did not look a good bet when two years ago S&P downgraded Poland, blaming a weakened independence of key institutions under the government of the conservative PiS party.Last month the European Commission launched a process to suspend Poland's EU voting rights over its judicial reform which Brussels says is a threat to the rule of law. Hungary has pledged to block the procedure."Investors generally ignore political risks (in Central Europe)," said Viktor Szabo, senior investment manager at Aberdeen Investment Management. "Premiers come and go, policies do not change much, budgets do not blow up, and the region performs well." Indeed, rating agencies were most positive on Poland's outlook last year. Sectors including banks, which initially suffered under PiS rule, have improved their performance.The currency helped. The zloty, along with the Czech crown, was the world's top-performing currency last year.Its gains versus the Swiss franc