The Borneo Post

M’sia gains as investors flock to Asian bonds

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So Asian fixed-income starts to look a lot more attractive.

SINGAPORE: Asia bond demand is running at its highest level in eight months and looks set to stay firm this year, boosted by the region’s higher returns at a time when stubbornly low inflation in the United States is keeping a lid on Treasury yields.

Investors poured US$ 9 billion into Asian government and corporate bonds in May, topping US$ 8.8 billion in April, ANZ Research shows. Both were the highest levels since September 2016.

Daniel Morris, senior investment strategist at BNP Paribas Asset Management in London, said initial hopes US President Donald Trump would lift inflation and growth through fiscal stimulus have been dashed. That has pulled both the dollar and US debt yields back.

“So Asian fixed-income starts to look a lot more attractive,” he said.

After hitting a two-year high of 2.641 per cent in December, US 10year Treasury yields have fallen back. They dropped to 2.103 per cent last week, their lowest level since Trump’s election win, after the United States reported that May core inflation, which excludes food and energy, was the lowest in two years.

Even the US Federal Reserve’s interest rate increase and hawkish tone, which came on the same day as the data, failed to substantia­lly lift Treasury yields.

While US five-year yields, which are highly sensitive to rate policy, rose to a four-week high of 1.8 perc ent last week, they are well below this year’s peak of 2.148 per cent hit in March.

“The big picture remains one in which investors have more faith in the longevity of the current regime of exceptiona­lly easy monetary conditions than they have in the sustainabi­lity of the cyclical upswing in corporate earnings,” said Paul O’Connor, co-head of multiasset strategy at Janus Henderson Investors in London.

That has left Asian bonds looking relatively attractive, analysts said.

The ANZ data covers the Asian emerging bond markets of South Korea, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Philippine­s and China.

Most funds in April and May poured into India, where returns on 10-year government bonds are around 6.5 per cent, Malaysia, at 3.9 per cent and South Korea, where yields are around 2.13 per cent, the data shows.

“The fact that there has been a reduction in tail risk in terms of European political risk, the fact that there are less inflation expectatio­ns in the US and therefore expectatio­ns for monetary policy could be more dovish, is generally supportive of Asian fixed income,” said Omar Slim, Asian fixed income portfolio manager at PineBridge Investment­s in Singapore.

“Asia also continues to have relatively good credit metrics.”

The bond market strength might prompt a pullback in demand in the near term, analysts said, but the longer- term outlook is positive, especially as low US inflation is undercutti­ng the conviction for higher Fed interest rates.

The risk is if the Fed does follow through on its hawkish messaging even as inflation is subdued. Last week, after their second rate rise this year, Fed officials suggested they are more concerned about keeping rates too low for too long than they are about raising them too fast or too high.

The investment in Asia bonds is partly a bet on the region’s relatively strong economic growth – the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund forecasts Asia-Pacific GDP will rise 5.5 per cent in 2017 and 5.4 per cent in 2018.

There are also strong inflows into Asia across asset classes, so bond demand is not about risk aversion, said Khoon Goh, head of Asia research at ANZ.

Inflows into Asian equities have been positive this year, and the MSCI Asia ex- Japan index is up 22 per cent.

“If you see very strong inflows in debt and less so in equities, then it’s fair to make the statement that it’s risk aversion. But the fact that you’re seeing strong inflows into both means this is not the case,” Goh said. — Reuters

Daniel Morris, London BNP Paribas Asset Management senior investment strategist

 ??  ?? Even the US Federal Reserve’s interest rate increase and hawkish tone, which came on the same day as the data, failed to substantia­lly lift Treasury yields. — Reuters photo
Even the US Federal Reserve’s interest rate increase and hawkish tone, which came on the same day as the data, failed to substantia­lly lift Treasury yields. — Reuters photo

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