Business Standard

EM rout nearing a turning point: Templeton

- BLOOMBERG

Franklin Templeton Investment­s says the rout in emerging markets may be nearing a bottom though reckons there are still countries like the Philippine­s that will suffer.

Given the uncertaint­y, the money manager is keeping a net neutral dollar position, while making trades including shorting the Philippine peso, as well as betting the Aussie will decline against the New Zealand dollar, said Chris Siniakov, managing director of fixed income for Australia at Templeton.

“We are trying not to make the big dollar decision at the moment because we feel like it could pop either way,” Siniakov said in an interview in Sydney. “We are preferring to choose where there’s relative value and who we expect to be winners and losers in the emerging market complex.”

The rout in emerging-market assets this year was spurred by higher Treasury yields and US tax cuts, alongside angst over the escalation of trade restrictio­ns between the US and China. Still, Templeton’s willingnes­s to sit out a directiona­l bet on the dollar highlights how divided money managers are after the greenback has gained more than 5 per cent since mid-April.

JPMorgan Asset Management and Man Group are among those expecting further strength. Others such as DoubleLine Capital’s Jeffrey Gundlach see a decline by year’s end.

The greenback’s resurgence has prompted President Donald Trump to previously jawbone the currency. That’s not deterring speculativ­e investors such as hedge funds that are still betting on further dollar gains, data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission show.

It could go either way, Siniakov said. The dollar might appreciate more if investors continue to seek haven assets amid worsening US and China trade relations.

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