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Low volatility lures emerging market funds to Malaysian bonds

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SINGAPORE: Malaysian bonds have an advantage over their peers when it comes to attracting investors – low volatility.

The sovereign debt has comparable volatility to Singapore and South Korea, yet offers almost twice as much yields, according to Bloomberg calculatio­ns.

That may explain why Malaysian bonds have gained every month since May, even as the government disclosed borrowings were 60% higher than thought and rating companies fretted over the widening budget deficit.

Global funds bought US$1.1bil of Malaysian securities in October, the most in 11 months, as investors returned to emerging Asian markets.

This is a turnaround from May and June when they dumped almost US$3bil after an unpreceden­ted change in government saw the return of former Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad.

Bond traders will remember him for imposing capital controls during the Asian financial crisis.

“We are seeing renewed interest in Malaysian government bonds from emerging-market investors,” said David Beale, co-head of the institutio­nal client group for Asia-Pacific at Deutsche Bank AG in Singapore.

It is an acknowledg­ment of “improved political stability, depth in market liquidity and relatively low rates volatility compared to elsewhere in the region,” he said.

The ringgit is also well-behaved with threemonth realised volatility the lowest among Asian currencies after the pegged Hong Kong dollar.

The currency itself has lost just 3.6% this year amid the rout in emerging-market peers. — Bloomberg

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