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Bailout Euphoria Signals Peak Of Pessimism In Emerging Markets

Over the past two weeks, the IMF has been sewing up or inching toward loan agreements with vulnerable nations.

Bailout Euphoria Signals Peak of Pessimism in Emerging Markets
Bailout Euphoria Signals Peak of Pessimism in Emerging Markets

It may be too early to turn bullish on emerging markets -- but a raft of bailouts pledged by the IMF and China has some investors deciding it’s also too risky to stay bearish.

Over the past two weeks, the International Monetary Fund has been sewing up or inching toward loan agreements with vulnerable nations Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Zambia, Egypt and Chile. Meanwhile, China is overcoming its own reticence to offer debt relief, saying it will forgive the liabilities of 17 African countries and redirect its own IMF reserves to the continent’s aid.

While some nations are still waiting, with Ukraine’s premier on Saturday criticizing slow progress from the IMF in agreeing to an assistance package, the fund’s support has dramatically changed the odds for poorer states where a wave of debt defaults looked inevitable. Now, their distress sagas are being recast as turnaround stories, enabling investors to dip a cautious toe back into their assets.

Bailout Euphoria Signals Peak Of Pessimism In Emerging Markets

“We’ve seen a rebound in emerging-market dollar bonds as the IMF appears to be turning increasingly responsive to the difficulties faced by frontier emerging markets,” said Aninda Mitra, head of Asia macro and investment strategy at BNY Mellon Investment Management in Singapore. “This is helping some investors turn more neutral on emerging markets from a very bearish view.”

This year’s selloff in emerging-market dollar debt has been so sharp that it dwarfs losses made during the 2008 financial crisis. A Bloomberg gauge of the bonds has slumped more than 16%, heading for its worst year on record. Its 10 biggest losers are all countries that have defaulted or are struggling to repay debt, including Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Lebanon, Ghana and Belarus. 

But since mid-July, bears are easing their grip. The benchmark index has gained 2.9%, while JPMorgan Chase & Co. data show the extra yield on sovereign debt over Treasuries has fallen 102 basis points from a two-year high of 593 basis points. An index that tracks capital flows into emerging markets has risen more than 4%.

Bailout Euphoria Signals Peak Of Pessimism In Emerging Markets

Bilateral support is also helping to ease fears of defaults. India has given billions in emergency aid to Sri Lanka, while Pakistan has received $9 billion of investment and loans from the Middle East. Egypt is also getting more than $22 billion from its Persian Gulf allies.

Meanwhile, China said it will forgive a total of 23 interest-free loans to African nations and redirect $10 billion of IMF reserves. Beijing accounts for almost 40% of the bilateral and private-creditor debt that the world’s poorest countries need to service this year, according to the World Bank. 

While betting on the possibility of defaults is becoming increasingly unviable, assets of distressed nations are benefiting.

Zambia’s kwacha is the world’s second best-performing currency against the dollar, surging 8.4% this quarter, after the nation won approval for a $1.3 billion bailout. Pakistan’s rupee strengthened more than 8% in August, the best performance in the world, even as the currency of Ghana, a distressed nation which hasn’t gained an IMF deal yet, was the biggest decliner. Sri Lanka’s bonds have recovered from the depths of a selloff as bondholders seek to get the best deal possible in a restructuring exercise.

Still, as long as the dollar doesn’t begin a consistent slide and Federal Reserve rate-hike expectations stay firm, global investors are unlikely to totally return to the asset class. 

But with the IMF acting to counter some of the pain hanging over emerging markets, others are starting to give these nations another look.

“We have seen some inflows in recent weeks with tactical additions from global investors in certain pockets,” said Neeraj Seth, head of Asian credit at BlackRock Inc., which he says is neutral on emerging-market assets and expects to see attractive opportunities in the coming quarters. “As we see further stabilization of US rates volatility and stabilization of the dollar, we will potentially see global investors revisiting emerging-market allocations.”

What to watch this week: 

  • China will report data that is likely to show the economic recovery stalled in August. Heatwaves, power shortages, Covid-19 flareups -- problems are piling up on top of a damaging property slump, according to Bloomberg Economics
  • China’s policy makers will have a window of opportunity to add cash into the financial system on Thursday when 600 billion yuan ($87 billion) of one-year policy loans come due
  • India, Poland and the Czech Republic are set to report inflation data
  • Russia is forecast to cut its benchmark rate, according to most economists in a Bloomberg survey

(Updates to add China loans data in What to watch section)

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