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Haven Rout Sends Wall of Money Rushing Into Emerging Markets

Sentiment in the bond market has shifted toward taking on more risk.

Haven Rout Sends Wall of Money Rushing Into Emerging Markets
Sentiment in the bond market has shifted toward taking on more risk

(Bloomberg) -- Sentiment in the bond market has shifted toward taking on more risk, with a wall of money that had been waiting on the sidelines making its way to emerging markets, according to Pinebridge Investments.

Thursday’s rout in U.S. Treasuries and German bunds coincided with a rally in high-yielding debt of emerging markets, Anders Faergemann, a senior portfolio manager at Pinebridge in London, said by phone. The move helped junk bonds to recoup some of their underperformance in August relative to investment-grade debt, he said.

“We are seeing a rerun of the hunt for yield we saw in June-July after the May wobble,” Faergemann said. “We had a correction in August and valuations have become attractive. Investors sitting on cash are coming back after the holiday period.”

Haven Rout Sends Wall of Money Rushing Into Emerging Markets

Renewed expectations for progress in the U.S.-China trade talks and a better-than-expected print on U.S. service-industries growth spurred bond investors to shift some of their capital to riskier bets. That contrasts with their rush to safety in August when the average yield on emerging-market dollar bonds jumped the most in nine months.

Thursday’s gains for riskier assets may continue as a drop in new-bond issuance last month left investors flush with cash, Faergemann said. Money managers who have to meet a yield target would have to put that money into operation in developing nations, he said, citing the proliferation of negative-yielding debt around the world.

Yield-Chasers’ Holiday Sends Emerging-Bond Sales to 42-Month Low

  • The yield on Argentina’s 100-year bond fell for a third day to below 17%, after closing last week at 18.85%
  • Longer-dated bonds enjoying a resurgence included Nigeria’s 2047 debt, which shaved off 15 basis points of yield
  • Angola’s international bond due 2028 shed 13 basis points of yield, building on a 23 point drop on Wednesday
  • Ghana’s sinkable securities due 2051 advanced, taking the two-day drop in yield to 33 basis points

The gains could extend if the U.S. economy continues to grow by at least 2% and China’s expansion doesn’t fall below 6% even as global central banks remain accommodative, Faergemann said.

“It’s this sort of a sweet spot we are looking for,” he said.

--With assistance from Robert Brand.

To contact the reporter on this story: Srinivasan Sivabalan in London at ssivabalan@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Dana El Baltaji at delbaltaji@bloomberg.net, Robert Brand, Julia Leite

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