ADVERTISEMENT

Emerging Markets Trust China’s Virus Steps Will Keep Rally Going

Emerging markets may take their cue this week from a recovery in commodities & signs China’s efforts to stem spread of the virus.

Emerging Markets Trust China’s Virus Steps Will Keep Rally Going
List of emerging market currencies displayed on a screen. (Photographer: Sanjit Das/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) --

Emerging-market assets may take their cue this week from a recovery in commodities and signs China’s efforts to stem the spread of the coronavirus are working.

Gauges of stocks, bonds and currencies in the developing world all rose in the five days through Friday as raw materials had their best week this year. China’s Communist Party officials urged the nation to meet its economic targets for 2020 as Hubei province, the epicenter of the outbreak, reported a slowing rate of new infections.

Despite a rally since late January, emerging markets have underperformed stocks and bonds in developed nations. That trend should soon reverse, according to Pictet Asset Management, which oversees almost $600 billion.

“Valuations in emerging markets, given what’s going on, are more attractive than developed markets,” Luca Paolini, chief strategist at Pictet in London, said in an interview.

MSCI Inc.’s index of emerging equities rose 1.3% last week to pare this year’s loss. Currencies in developing nations strengthened for the first time in four weeks, led by the Mexican peso, South African rand and Russian ruble. Bloomberg’s gauge of commodities rose for the first time since early January.

On Monday, emerging-market equities climbed again, while currencies were little changed on a day of lower-than-normal trading due to a U.S. holiday. China considered delaying its highest-profile annual political meeting for the first time in decades, as the government attempts to contain the virus.

Emerging Markets Trust China’s Virus Steps Will Keep Rally Going

Listen here for the emerging markets weekly podcast.

Saudi G-20

  • The U.S. Federal Reserve will publish minutes of its most recent meeting on Wednesday
  • Finance ministers from across the world gather in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, from Saturday to discuss the global economy and how to limit the fallout from the coronavirus
  • Singapore’s government may give some indication of how the virus is affecting Asian economies when it announces its budget on Tuesday
  • The People’s Bank of China on Monday cut its one-year rate on medium-term funding to commercial lenders by 10 basis points to 3.15%, the lowest since 2017
    • Monday’s rate cut could herald a reduction in the loan prime rate -- the basis for pricing corporate and household loans -- on Thursday as authorities seek to keep plenty of cheap money flowing to businesses and consumers struggling to counter the impact of the virus
    • “The focus will be on China for answers critical to the region and beyond -- how the battle to contain the coronavirus is progressing, how much of the economy has managed to get going again after extended shutdowns, and how is policy shifting,” according to a report from Bloomberg Economics. “We expect cuts to loan prime rates, and will be on the lookout for other measures aimed at shoring up growth”

Turkey, Indonesia Rates

  • Bank Indonesia is expected to cut its benchmark rate on Thursday, having been among the most vocal Asian central banks in saying it will keep policy accommodative to counter the economic impact of the coronavirus
    • Central banks in Malaysia, Thailand and the Philippines have already reduced borrowing costs this year and have signaled they remain open to more easing
    • “Asian central banks are trying to get ahead of the curve of monetary easing to support growth as the rapidly spreading disease dampens the economic outlook,” Prakash Sakpal, an economist at ING Groep NV in Singapore, wrote in a note. “The next one to join the race seems to be Indonesia”
    • Indonesia’s economy is vulnerable to the closure of Chinese factories, which will sap demand for local exports such as palm oil, coal and copper. China is the nation’s top export destination, with shipments last year reaching $28 billion
    • While the rupiah has retreated from a two-year high reached in late January, it is still emerging Asia’s best-performing currency this year
    • Bank Indonesia trimmed its seven-day reverse repo rate by a total 100 basis points last year to 5%
  • Analysts expect Turkey’s central bank Governor Murat Uysal to continue his rate-slashing spree on Wednesday, moving a step closer to the single-digit level demanded by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Aggressive monetary easing has already brought Turkish interest rates below the level of inflation
    • The lira has weakened this past month

Latin America Economy

  • Brazil is set to release inflation data on Thursday, which will be closely watched by investors after central bank officials signaled they will stop cutting rates

      • The nation will also post current account balance figures for January on Friday
    • Argentina’s government is expected to choose financial advisers and consult with creditors in the third and fourth weeks of February, according to its negotiation timeline

      • December economic activity index and January trade balance data will be published Friday
    • Peru is expected to post fourth-quarter GDP numbers showing a sharp deceleration from a year earlier, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg

    --With assistance from Karl Lester M. Yap, Netty Ismail and Ben Bartenstein.

    To contact the reporters on this story: Paul Wallace in Dubai at pwallace25@bloomberg.net;Lilian Karunungan in Singapore at lkarunungan@bloomberg.net;Sydney Maki in New York at smaki8@bloomberg.net

    To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alex Nicholson at anicholson6@bloomberg.net, Justin Carrigan, Paul Wallace

    ©2020 Bloomberg L.P.