The hunt for higher yields is all set to return to emerging markets in 2019, as central banks zealously guard their interest-rate advantage over the Federal Reserve.
From Indonesia to South Africa, Mexico and Russia, policy makers have countered Fed tightening with rate hikes this year, sometimes even pre-emptively. That’s left their currencies with greater risk-adjusted returns for traders who borrow in dollars and invest in developing nations.
Expected carry returns for the next 12 months are rising at a time when the worst rout since 2015 has made currency valuations too low to ignore. But perhaps the biggest surprise is that even after drawing down foreign exchange to bolster their currencies, emerging markets have escaped any serious dents in their reserve buffers.
That means greater probability of returns at lower risk for investors.
Arbitrage opportunity
Potential carry returns in the next 12 months, as signalled by non-deliverable forwards and currency options, have risen to multi-year highs in some cases. Thirteen of the 20 major emerging-market currencies assessed by Bloomberg project positive gains even after adjusting for volatility.
Mexico’s peso and Turkey’s lira offer implied carry returns that are near the highest in a decade as the currencies stabilise after political upheavals. For Argentina’s peso, the arbitrage opportunity is the best in three years, while for Russia’s ruble, it’s the highest since February. Countries whose central bankers have stayed dovish and project negative carry are: Hungary, where short-term bond yields are now negative, and Taiwan, which has the worst promised returns across emerging markets
How we got the data:
Bloomberg calculated the difference between one-year implied yields of EM currencies and one-year Libor, and adjusted it for one-year implied volatility.
Value beckons
The 2018 sell-off hit all emerging-market currencies, but the worst was reserved for eastern European, African and Latin American currencies. The outperformance of Asian currencies has left them overvalued. Hence bargain hunters may look elsewhere in the new year.
Even after their rebound, the Argentine peso and Turkish lira are the lowest valued currencies relative to their own past. The Thai baht, Korean won and Taiwanese dollar are looking expensive. That may lend weight to those speculating Beijing will weaken the currency beyond 7/$, especially if the recent trade truce with the US proves short-lived.
With great carry and a cheap currency, Russia is beginning to look irresistible, provided the US doesn’t ramp up sanctions.
How we got the data:
Bloomberg analysed the standard scores of real effective exchange rates from the Bank of International Settlements, based on 10-year averages.
Low risk
Policy makers in emerging markets have plenty of firepower to defend their currencies if they need to. Central banks for all the 20 currencies have foreign reserves equivalent to more than three months of imports, which is the International Monetary Fund’s recommended threshold.
Brazil, Russia, Taiwan and China look especially resilient, with coverage ratios of more than 15 months. Turkey and Hungary have much lower buffers. But Turkish reserves have risen 9% since hitting a low in October
How we got the data:
Bloomberg took the local-currency value of each country’s foreign reserves and divided that by the value of monthly imports.
* Sign up to Fin24's top news in your inbox: SUBSCRIBE TO FIN24 NEWSLETTER
Follow Fin24 on Twitter and Facebook. 24.com encourages commentary submitted via MyNews24. Contributions of 200 words or more will be considered for publication.