Prudent Investor Comments…
Evidences are mounting that the Phisix sell-offs are of class related and has little to do with domestic developments. This report from Bloomberg accentuates that currencies, bonds and stocks in emerging markets have ALL been thrashed.
I would consider this though, an evanescent sell-off considering that, one, emerging assets have been streaking red hot and requires some cooling off or profit taking, and two, commodity prices in general remain buoyant which means that the primary revenue drivers of most emerging markets are still bustling.
Further, this queasiness has also been due to speculations on the US Fed’s move tonight, if it would drop its ‘measured pace’ of hiking rates and open its doors to a more aggressive stance which is currently boosting the US dollar at the expense of emerging market assets.
Emerging Market Bonds, Currencies and Stocks Extend Declines
March 21 (Bloomberg) -- Emerging market bonds, stocks and currencies fell, extending last week's declines, as investors shunned riskier assets amid expectations rising oil prices will stoke inflation, pushing
Surging oil prices and rising government bond yields in the
``Risk appetite is fading fast,'' said Jean-Dominique Butikofer, who manages $850 million of emerging-market debt at Julius Baer & Co. in
Average spreads on emerging-market debt widened today, rising 5 basis points to 368 basis points, or 3.68 percentage points, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s EMBI Plus Index.
Emerging market assets are being hurt by speculation the Federal Reserve may signal that it plans to boost the pace of interest-rate increases. By June, the Fed will stop using the term ``measured'' to describe the pace of its interest-rate increases, according to 13 of the 22 firms that trade with the Fed.
Fed Concern
The Fed will raise its benchmark overnight rate by a quarter- point tomorrow to 2.75 percent, the seventh increase since June, according to 93 of 101 economists in a separate poll.
``Everything in Brazil and Latin America right now is about U.S. rates,'' said Pedro Tuesta, senior Latin America economist for London-based 4Cast Inc. in Washington D.C. ``With the possibility that the Fed may change the tone and speed of rate increases, there is less appetite for emerging-market risk.''
Morgan Stanley Capital International Inc.'s Emerging Markets Index of stocks in Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Asia and
The yield on the benchmark 4 percent
``Investors' appetite for risk, which has been huge, is on the wane,'' Morgan Stanley's London-based chief fixed-income strategist Joachim Fels wrote in a report published on March 18. ``The bull-run in all the major fixed-income asset classes appears to be over.''
Currencies
The Slovak koruna dropped 2 percent against the dollar today, the biggest decline among 61 currencies tracked by Bloomberg. The Turkish lira lost 1.7 percent, the Czech koruna 1.9 percent and the Romanian leu 1.6 percent.
``This isn't a rout but there's more risk adjustment going on,'' said Jon Harrison, a currency strategist at Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein in
Emerging Europe, Middle East and
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