Sunday Times

Timing is key as emerging markets face a volatile year

- ROBIN WIGGLESWOR­TH

THE US Federal Reserve triggered a storm in developing countries this year when it announced plans to scale back its monetary stimulus. The market reaction was quick, violent and indiscrimi­nate. Currencies tumbled, borrowing costs soared, stock markets nose-dived and bond sales choked up. No country proved immune from the turmoil.

A wave of relief washed over the developing world, therefore, when the Fed decided in September to maintain its stimulus scheme. Losses were clawed back and issuance rebounded, despite the chilling effect of the US government shutdown.

With the end of the year in sight, fund managers are considerin­g what is in store for emerging markets in 2014. But there is little agreement on what lies ahead — except that it will be interestin­g.

Many asset managers expect the US central bank to maintain the size of its $85-billion-a-month bond-buying programme for this year at the very least. “The Fed clearly wants to see a stronger recovery before it cuts back on stimulus,” said Ramin Toloui, global co-head of emerging markets at Pimco.

That gives countries a chance to replenish central bank reserves depleted by currency market interventi­ons and capital outflows, take a hard look at government spending, and perhaps even push economic reforms that would make them more resilient to any renewed turmoil. Indonesia, for example, saw its foreign currency reserves fall from $107-billion late in April to $92.7billion at the end of July.

But the central bank’s safety funds rose to $95.7-billion by the end of September. “It’s prudent for countries to take advantage of the more benign environmen­t and rebuild their firepower,” said Toloui.

In the meantime, the higher yields offered by developing country bonds have continued to tempt fund managers, and issuance has rebounded.

After collapsing in May and June and staying sluggish over the ensuing months, bond sales in emerging markets bounced back to $108-billion in September and October, according to Dealogic.

Overall issuance has now gone above $440-billion, bringing a record within reach. Corporate issuance has broken the previous record. But the Fed will eventually “taper” its quantitati­ve easing programme, a move likely to put bonds under renewed pressure.

Sergio Trigo Paz, head of emerging-market debt at BlackRock, said he believed the reaction would be less violent, given the time investors have had to prepare. But many are warier and predict turbulence and rising bond yields. That will make the investment environmen­t more challengin­g for asset managers and, as a result, make it tougher for countries and companies in the developing world to issue debt.

The main concern is whether larger countries fail to take advantage of the current calm. Among the most vulnerable are Turkey, Brazil, India, Indonesia and South Africa. But any country with a large current account deficit will be tested.

Tapering constitute­s a serious “technical” danger for emerging markets, but there are also deeper, more fundamenta­l reasons the developing world could be facing a difficult 2014. Economic growth has been slowing for several years. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund expects the developing world’s output to expand by 4.5% this year — 0.5 percentage points lower than its July forecast and down from the 6% growth predicted in April 2012.

Much will depend on China, a big driver of economic expansion for emerging markets in the past decade. Beijing has acted to prop up its economy, and most analysts expect it to attain or exceed its 7.5% growth target this year. Next year is more uncertain. “China is stabilisin­g, but we think we’ll get a more negative news flow next year. And that’s not good for emerging-market fundamenta­ls,” said Trigo Paz.

Timing a more defensive stance is the tricky part for fund managers. “No one wants to be the last to sell, but no one wants to be the first either,” said Toloui. —© The Financial Times

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