NEW YORK: The balmy days of dovish monetary policy that fuelled a rally in emerging market bonds looks to be over as central banks across the developing world turn more hawkish.
Returns from emerging market local currency debt are trailing their US dollar-denominated peers by the most in two years as resurgent inflation has damped the prospect of further interest rate cuts in Latin America and Eastern Europe.
At the same time, policymakers in emerging Asia have signalled an increasing unwillingness to ease policy before the US Federal Reserve (Fed).
“I definitely think the easy money is gone,” said Robert Samson, a fund manager in Singapore at Nikko Asset Management, which oversaw US$240bil at the end of March.
“Duration hasn’t really paid anywhere with curve inversion and the Fed higher for longer.”
The renewed hawkishness is upending a bet which earlier this year was hailed as a “once-in-a-generation” opportunity to buy emerging market local debt.
Not only has investor enthusiasm been damped by the diminishing prospect of rate cuts, but a super-charged US dollar is dragging down developing nation currencies.
Emerging market local bonds have handed investors a loss of about 1% this year, after rallying by more than 6% in 2023, based on a Bloomberg index.
In contrast, a corresponding gauge of US dollar debt has returned 2.5% since the end of December.
Amid the recent hawkish developments, Brazil’s inflation topped forecasts in May, while Mexico’s central bank said last month sticky prices pressures are a reason to be cautious about further easing. Meanwhile, Peru’s policymakers unexpectedly halted rate cuts last week amid concern about consumer prices.
In Europe, Hungary’s central bank said it’s near the end of its easing cycle, while the Polish government’s wage plan may delay rate cuts.
In Asia, Thailand’s policymakers kept rates on hold last week after inflation quickened, while their peers in Taiwan boosted the reserve requirement ratio for banks in a form of policy tightening.
“We think the relatively brighter growth outlook and still somewhat high inflation rates suggest that it is not yet time for Asian emerging markets central banks to start easing,” wrote Barclays Plc economists including Brian Tan in a note.
Looming over all is the Fed’s higher-for-longer mantra that’s shrinking the scope for policy easing in emerging markets.
The Fed “is a significant headwind for progress in the second half,” said Rajeev De Mello, a global macro portfolio manager at GAMA Asset Management SA in Singapore.
“All the central banks worldwide, even beyond emerging markets, were hoping that in a way the Fed would help them out by sticking to the initial plans of cutting rates.”
The growing hawkish signs are already helping to trigger investor selling.
The US$2.7bil VanEck JP Morgan EM Local Currency Bond exchange-traded fund (ETF), the world’s largest ETF tracking developing nation debt, has seen net outflows over the past three months, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Some see the recent pullback in local currency bonds as a reason to be bullish.
Value is re-emerging for emerging market debt after rate cuts have been priced out, and political risks in Mexico and Brazil are now accounted for, said Shamaila Khan, head of fixed-income for emerging markets and Asia Pacific at UBS Asset Management in New York.
“It’s probably looking more attractive than it has over the last several months,” she said.
“We do think that the local space has potential to perform quite well going into the end of this year, even whether it’s one rate cut or two rate cuts from the Fed.”
William Blair International Ltd also sees value re-appearing and is even funnelling money into frontier markets.
“We currently have between 12% and 15% in local frontier markets with a risk limit of 1% in each market, so we do have a good diversification there,” said Daniel Wood, a fund manager at William Blair in London.
He added that he favoured countries including Kenya, Nigeria and Pakistan.
“You’re in the sweet spot now where you’re enjoying high carry with strong multilateral support.” — Bloomberg