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Emerging Markets Navigate Global Interest Rate Volatility

- By Tobias Adrian, Fabio Natalucci, and Jason Wu

Global interest rates in recent months have gone on a rollercoas­ter, especially those on longerterm government bonds. Yields on 10-year US Treasuries are climbing again after pulling back from a 16-year high of 5 percent in October. Interest rate moves in other advanced economies had been equally prodigious.

Emerging market economies, however, saw much milder rate moves. We take a longerterm perspectiv­e on this in our latest Global Financial Stability Report, demonstrat­ing that the average sensitivit­y to US interest rates of 10-year sovereign yield of Latin American and Asian emerging markets declined by two-thirds and two-fifths, respective­ly, during the current monetary policy tightening cycle compared with the taper tantrum in 2013.

While the lower sensitivit­y is in part due to the divergence in monetary policy between advanced economies’ and emerging markets’ central banks over the past two years, it nonetheles­s challenges findings in the economic literature that show large spillovers from advanced economies’ interest rates to emerging markets. In particular, major emerging markets have been more insulated from global interest rate volatility than would be expected based on historical experience, especially in Asia.

There are other signs of resilience in major emerging markets during this period of volatility. Exchange rates, stock prices, and sovereign spreads fluctuated in a modest range. More remarkably, foreign investors did not leave their bond markets, in contrast to past episodes when large outflows ensued after surges in global interest rate volatility, including as recently as 2022.

This resilience was not just good luck. Many emerging markets have spent years improving policy frameworks to mitigate external pressures. They have built additional currency reserves over the last two decades. Many countries have refined exchange-rate arrangemen­ts and moved towards exchangera­te flexibilit­y. Significan­t foreign exchange swings have contribute­d to macroecono­mic stability in many cases. The structure of public debt has also become more resilient, and both domestic savers and domestic investors have become more confident investing in local-currency assets, reducing reliance on foreign capital.

Perhaps most importantl­y, and closely aligned with IMF advice, major emerging markets have enhanced central bank independen­ce, improved policy frameworks, and gained progressiv­ely more credibilit­y. We would also argue that central banks in these countries have gained additional credibilit­y since

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