Deccan Chronicle

Global bond winners came from EMs in 2021

- LILIAN KARUNUNGAN & MASAKI KONDO

Emerging-market bonds were supposed to be dragged down this year as central banks moved toward withdrawin­g stimulus. Instead, the best-performing global debt was all from developing nations.

Sovereign bonds issued by South Africa, China, Indonesia, India and Croatia topped the rankings of 46 markets around the world in 2021, according to data compiled by Bloomberg through December 23. They alone managed to shrug off the biggest annual jump in US treasury yields since 2013, a shock that was powerful enough to upend currency carry trades and emerging-market stocks.

The positive returns generated by the five markets should give investors at least some confidence the Federal Reserve will be able to wind down asset purchases and start to raise interest rates without triggering a spike in global volatility. A deeper look into 2021 performanc­e shows the top performers have mostly fallen in price, but coupon returns were high enough to offset these losses.

Emerging-market bonds as a whole have dropped

1.4 per cent in 2021, a separate Bloomberg index shows. That is still far better than they did during the so-called taper tantrum of 2013, when the Fed's signal it would cut asset purchases saw them decline 3.8 per cent over the year, including a slump of 11 per cent from a high in May to a low three months later.

Coupons and interestra­te differenti­als will "play a strong part" in investment decisions in a tightening environmen­t in

2022, said Shafali Sachdev, head of fixed-income, currencies and commoditie­s for Asia at BNP Paribas Wealth Management in Singapore. "Investing in select emerging-market bonds may be a preferenti­al way to achieve this, rather than lengthenin­g duration or going down the credit curve."

South Africa's bonds have been the global pacesetter­s this year with a total return of 8.6 per cent, despite the nation being the first to identify the omicron variant of the coronaviru­s in November. Chinese securities gained 5.6 per cent, Indonesia's climbed 5.2 per cent, India's rose 2.7 per cent, and Croatia's increased per cent.

The biggest losses were seen in Hungary, Peru and Chile: three countries in which central banks raised interest rates during the year.

Bonds in South Africa, Indonesia and China look set to extend gains into 2022, according to HSBC Holdings Plc.

A "mildly bullish stance" is warranted on South Africa as its debt market has one of the steepest curves and highest real yields within emerging markets, and offers quite sizable carry even on a currency-hedged basis, analysts led by Andre de Silva in Hong Kong, wrote in a research note this month.

Finisterre Capital is also positive on the debt of South Africa and Indonesia.

There has been a lot of improvemen­t in fiscally challenged countries in emerging markets this year, including South Africa, said Damien Buchet, chief investment officer at the Londonbase­d investment manager that focuses on emerging-market debt. "We still love" its bond market for that reason, he said.

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