ADVERTISEMENT

Real Yields Appeal in Southeast Asia as Inflation Monster Sleeps

Real Yields Appeal in Southeast Asia as Inflation Monster Sleeps

Inflation fears are hotting up around the world, threatening to undermine the attraction of bond markets. But for now, Southeast Asia appears to be relatively immune.

Indeed, the lack of price growth has been a major factor helping to push up the region’s real yields, or nominal bond yields adjusted for inflation. Indonesia’s consumer-price gains slid to the least in two decades in July, while Malaysia and Thailand have both seen deflation for the last four months. The three countries all offer 10-year real yields of above 2%, putting them in the top tier of major emerging markets.

Real Yields Appeal in Southeast Asia as Inflation Monster Sleeps

A major factor behind the subdued inflation in the region has been sluggish food prices. These have a relatively high weighting in local inflation baskets: approximately 30% for Malaysia, and around 36% for Thailand and Indonesia, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The price of rice -- the region’s major food staple -- may trend lower in the second half due to rising supply from Thailand, Vietnam and India, Fitch Solutions said last month.

One exception to the overall picture of benign inflation is the Philippines, where a report this week showed consumer prices unexpectedly climbed 2.7% in June. That has resulted in the real yields on its 10-year bonds sinking almost to zero.

Investors should be aware that rising consumer prices remain a risk, especially with the spread of emerging-market yields over the U.S. narrowing. Reflationary price pressures have typically started in developed markets and spilled over into emerging ones, according to a study by Bloomberg Intelligence last month. There are plenty of signs price momentum is building, most notably U.S. two-year break-even rates have risen for 14 straight weeks.

Low Volatility

In addition to the favorable inflation picture, another factor burnishing the appeal of Southeast Asian bonds from a real yield perspective is the low currency volatility, a key consideration for investors who prefer not to use hedges.

While South Africa, Brazil and Mexico offer notably high bond yields, they also come with some of the most volatile currencies. In contrast, not a single Southeast Asian currency appears among the top seven emerging markets when ranked for three-month implied foreign-exchange volatility.

Real Yields Appeal in Southeast Asia as Inflation Monster Sleeps

There are plenty of things for investors to like about Southeast Asian bonds, including positive supply metrics and favorable positioning. Low currency volatility and attractive real yields can be added to that list -- so long as the inflation monster stays away.

What to Watch

  • The Philippines will auction 30 billion pesos ($612 million) of 10-year bonds on Tuesday, while Thailand will sell 5 billion baht ($161 million) of 30-year debt (LB496A) the same day.
  • Indonesia will auction 20 trillion rupiah ($1.4 billion) of bills and bonds on Tuesday, and the central bank will begin its unconventional debt financing program by buying 82 trillion rupiah of bonds from the government via a private placement on Thursday
  • Jakarta’s current social distancing measures is set to expire on Thursday, though a further increase in virus cases may see the government decide to extend them again
  • Malaysia will release GDP data for the second quarter on Friday, the first time period to account for the full impact of the economic lockdown

Note: Marcus Wong is an EM macro strategist who writes for Bloomberg. The observations he makes are his own and not intended as investment advice.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.