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As Rate Woes Roil Treasuries, Bond Funds Seek Refuge in Asia

The Treasuries rout is making emerging Asian bonds look even more attractive.

As Rate Woes Roil Treasuries, Bond Funds Seek Refuge in Asia
Coins fall into a container. (Photographer: Jason Alden/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- The Treasuries rout is making emerging Asian bonds look even more attractive.

Higher yields, buoyant economies, and a slower pace of rate increases in Asia suggest that sovereign debt in the region will outperform Treasuries, said Adam McCabe, head of Asian fixed income at Aberdeen Standard Investments. Indonesian, Chinese and Indian bonds offer value, according to Aberdeen, State Street Global Advisors and Amundi Asset Management.

“The fundamentals are still very strong in Asia from an economic perspective, and the adjustment from a policy perspective is larger in the U.S. than it is in Asia,” McCabe said in an interview in Singapore. “Those policies weren’t adopted in Asia, so the room for bond yields to move should be less.”

As the Federal Reserve moves to dial back its stimulus and the market starts to consider a quicker pace of interest-rate increases, the 10-year Treasury yield has surged to a four-year high with debate raging over how far and fast it will advance. While Asian central banks are also starting to tighten, the expectation is for a more gradual increase, according to State Street.

As Rate Woes Roil Treasuries, Bond Funds Seek Refuge in Asia

The yield on Indonesian government notes due in a decade has climbed 10 basis points in February to 6.42 percent, while that on Indian securities rose 15 basis points to 7.58 percent. In China, yield on the 10-year bond is down 3 basis points to 3.89 percent.

In comparison, the 10-year Treasury yield has increased 17 basis points and reached a high of 2.94 percent last week. Goldman Sachs Asset Management has warned that it may reach 3.5 percent in the next six months. The Bloomberg Barclays EM Local Currency Government Asia Index has slipped 0.2 percent this year versus a 2.2 percent drop in the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Treasury gauge.

“On the whole for Asia, we’re seeing a bit of a slow normalization of interest rates,” said Ng Kheng Siang, Singapore-based Asia Pacific head of fixed income at State Street, which oversees $2.67 trillion. “We’ve seen that action taking place in Korea, Malaysia and possibly the Philippines may be next. We’re not seeing a major policy change.”

Bank of Korea raised its benchmark interest rate for the first time since 2011 in November, and a Bloomberg survey of economists suggests it will tighten once this year. Bank Negara Malaysia left the door open to further policy normalization after increasing the key rate in January. The Fed has flagged that it expects to raise rates three times.

Indonesia’s Allure

Once the recent volatility eases, local-currency China and Indonesian government bonds may offer buying opportunities, according to Ng. China is attractive due to the prospect of the nation’s inclusion in major bond indexes while economic reforms, domestic consumption and infrastructure spending will support Indonesia’s outlook, he said.

Amundi is similarly keen on Southeast Asia’s biggest economy, which won upgrades from two rating companies last year on the back of improving finances and accelerating growth. Global funds have bought $1.1 billion of rupiah sovereign debt so far this year after pumping in $12.1 billion in 2017.

“We still like markets that have increased credibility in policymaking and improved structural inflation dynamics,” said Wan Howe Chung, Amundi’s Singapore-based head of Asian fixed income. “These include Indonesia which very much falls into this bucket. With this selloff, we’re potentially adding some risk. It’s not cheap but there will be a point that we’ll feel that it’s cheap enough.”

For Amundi and Aberdeen, Indian bonds are a standout thanks to their relatively high yields and Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s policy initiatives. Foreign holdings of government and corporate bonds have risen by 116.2 billion rupees ($1.8 billion) this year. They increased by 1.36 trillion rupees in 2017.

“We see the reform effort as being ongoing and the direction of travel is very clear,” said Aberdeen’s McCabe. “As these reforms take shape, what you’ll find is that the country risk premium should decline.”

--With assistance from Netty Ismail

To contact the reporter on this story: Liau Y-Sing in Kuala Lumpur at yliau@bloomberg.net.

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

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