What Has Changed In Emerging Markets – Friday, May 19

(from my colleague Dr. Win Thin)

  • China’s government approved the creation of a bond link between Hong Kong and the mainland.
  • S&P upgraded Indonesia one notch to investment grade BBB- with stable.
  • Fitch revised the outlook on Vietnam’s BB- rating from stable to positive.
  • Egypt will announce a package of social spending soon.
  • Moody’s changed the outlook on Poland’s A2 rating from negative to stable.
  • Brazil press reported that meat-packing company JBS has submitted compromising tape recordings to the Supreme Court.
  • Chile central bank surprised markets with a 25 bp cut but signaled a move to a neutral bias.
  • In the EM equity space as measured by MSCI, Hungary (+2.6%), Indonesia (+2.0%), and Peru (+1.4%) have outperformed this week, while Brazil (-11.1%), Poland (-1.8%), and Egypt (-1.7%) have underperformed. To put this in better context, MSCI EM fell -0.3% this week while MSCI DM was flat.

    In the EM local currency bond space, India (10-year yield -11 bp), Korea (-7 bp), and Peru (-4 bp) have outperformed this week, while Brazil (10-year yield +155 bp), Argentina (+28 bp), and Turkey (+22 bp) have underperformed. To put this in better context, the 10-year UST yield fell 8 bp to 2.25%.

    In the EM FX space, SGD (+1.3% vs. USD), ZAR (+1.0% vs. USD), and THB (+0.9% vs. USD) have outperformed this week, while BRL (-4.6% vs. USD), ARS (-3.1% vs. USD), and INR (-0.5% vs. USD) have underperformed.

    China’s government approved the creation of a bond link between Hong Kong and the mainland. The PBOC and HKMA said that the bond connect system would only be northbound at the start, which give foreigners better access for buying onshore bonds. There will be no daily quota. No date was given for when the link would begin. The HKMA said eligible investors would include central banks, sovereign wealth funds, international banks, and medium- to long-term institutional investors.

    S&P upgraded Indonesia one notch to investment grade BBB- with stable. The move matches Moody’s and Fitch, but both of those have positive outlooks that suggest further upgrades. S&P cited improvement in the budget as the main factor behind the move. Our own sovereign rating model has Indonesia at BBB/Baa2/BBB and so further upgrades are warranted.

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    Author: Travis Esquivel

    Travis Esquivel is an engineer, passionate soccer player and full-time dad. He enjoys writing about innovation and technology from time to time.

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