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From Brazil to India, Emerging Currencies to Endure Tapering

The J.P. Morgan Emerging Market Volatility Index has reversed a two-week advance.

From Brazil to India, Emerging Currencies to Endure Tapering
Indian two thousand and five hundred rupee banknotes are arranged for a photograph in Mumbai, India (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- As global bonds reel under hawkish rhetoric by major central bankers, AllianceBernstein and Amundi Asset Management say emerging-market currencies will weather the storm better than 2013.

Improvements in external balances, higher reserves and subdued inflation are among factors making developing-nation economies from India to Mexico appear less vulnerable to the risk of outflows when their advanced peers begin to taper, they say. Recent stability in exchange rates and a gauge of price swings near a three-year low are signs of their resilience.

From Brazil to India, Emerging Currencies to Endure Tapering

“This episode of rising developed-market yields is unlikely to be as negative as it was in the 2013 taper tantrum selloff,” said Abbas Ameli-Renani, a London-based portfolio manager for EM bonds and currencies at Amundi, which oversees $1.2 trillion. “We continue to be comfortable with currency exposure on higher yielding EM currencies with ongoing external rebalancing, such as the Mexican peso and Brazilian real.”

Central banks led by the U.S. Federal Reserve are preparing to roll back easy credit policies as their economies recover and borrowing costs rise. Canada raised rates last week for the first time since 2010, becoming the first Group of Seven country to join the U.S. in doing so, while the European Central Bank and the Bank of England have hinted at the need to tighten.

The phasing out of stimulus is an unprecedented challenge that may be more disruptive than people think, JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chairman Jamie Dimon said Tuesday. The ECB’s Governing Council is scheduled to meet in Frankfurt July 19-20, with respondents in a Bloomberg survey split on whether officials might set the tone by dropping a pledge to boost quantitative easing if needed.

Even so, the MSCI Emerging Markets Currency Index is up in July, and higher from a month earlier, when the Bank of Canada surprised investors with a strong signal that it’s ready to raise rates. The J.P. Morgan Emerging Market Volatility Index fell last week, reversing a two-week advance, and is still trading near its lowest level since 2014.

From Brazil to India, Emerging Currencies to Endure Tapering

A gauge of the dollar sank to a 10-month low Friday, rounding out its worst week since May, after U.S. inflation and retail sales data missed estimates, casting doubts about the prospect of additional Fed tightening this year. That spurred gains in most Asian developing-nation exchange rates on Monday, with South Korea’s won leading the charge.

Emerging-market currencies have been a bright spot for investors amid a global hunt for yields. Higher rates have attracted inflows from overseas, helping improve the nations’ external balances. Slowing inflation has added to the appeal of many of these markets, while governments in India and Indonesia have taken steps to boost the economy.

HSBC Holdings Plc says it is bullish on local-currency government bonds in Mexico, South Africa, India, Indonesia, Malaysia and Russia, citing an expected decline in inflation risk premiums that will likely trigger flatter yield curves. Asian currencies topped a recent Bloomberg survey of EM watchers for their resilience to the risks looming ahead.

From Brazil to India, Emerging Currencies to Endure Tapering

“What’s really different today is that EM vulnerability is more concentrated in a narrow set of countries that do not constitute large parts of major equity or debt indexes,” said Morgan Harting, a New-York based portfolio manager at AllianceBernstein. Brazil, Turkey, Indonesia, India and Thailand, which were among the worst affected during the taper tantrum in 2013, have improved their fundamentals, he said.

A growing stockpile of foreign-exchange reserves has left developing nations with “greater firepower” than four years ago to absorb global shocks, giving investors “greater confidence in the macro stability of an EM country or region,” said Viraj Patel, a London-based foreign-exchange strategist at ING Groep NV.

Even so, money managers and strategists don’t expect emerging-market assets to be completely insulated when central banks begin to tighten. Also, their recommendations below explain why they are more optimistic about certain markets than others.

  • AllianceBernstein’s Harting:
    • Central and Eastern Europe nations such as Poland, Hungary, Czech Republic and Lithuania, and Asian countries such as Thailand, Korea and Taiwan are seen as having reduced external vulnerability
    • Current-account imbalances have deteriorated across a more limited set of oil-exporting nations including Saudi Arabia, Kazakhstan and Nigeria
    • In debt, the firm sees value in Latin American nations
  • Amundi’s Ameli-Renani:
    • Strength of fundamentals in Russia likely to outweigh downside risks from politics
    • “We remain more cautious on the lower yielding, lower beta currencies in Asia that are most exposed to Chinese growth. These include the likes of South Korea, Thailand and Taiwan.”
  • Kamakshya Trivedi, co-head of global foreign exchange and EM strategy at Goldman Sachs Group Inc.:
    • See more room for spot appreciation in MXN and ZAR, and less so in RUB, BRL, Trivedi wrote in a July 10 note
    • Shifted to a more constructive stance on TRY

To contact the reporters on this story: Kartik Goyal in Mumbai at kgoyal@bloomberg.net, Aline Oyamada in Sao Paulo at aoyamada3@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Tan Hwee Ann at hatan@bloomberg.net, Rita Nazareth at rnazareth@bloomberg.net, Shikhar Balwani, Ravil Shirodkar